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Oxygen‐18 dynamics in precipitation and streamflow in a semi‐arid agricultural watershed,Eastern Washington,USA
Authors:Bryan G. Moravec  C. Kent Keller  Jeffrey L. Smith  Richelle M. Allen‐King  Angela J. Goodwin  Jerry P. Fairley  Peter B. Larson
Affiliation:1. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Washington State University, PO Box 642812, Pullman, WA 99164‐2812, USA;2. School of Natural Resources, University of Arizona, PO Box 210043, Tucson, AZ 80521, USA;3. USDA‐ARS, Department of Crop and Soil Sciences, Washington State University, PO Box 646420, Pullman, WA 99164‐6420, USA;4. Department of Geology, University at Buffalo, SUNY, 876 Natural Sciences Complex, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA;5. Hart Crowser, 1700 Westlake Avenue North, Suite 200, Seattle, WA 98109‐33056, USA;6. Department of Geological Sciences, University of Idaho, PO Box 443022, Moscow, ID 83844‐3022, USA
Abstract:
Understanding flow pathways and mechanisms that generate streamflow is important to understanding agrochemical contamination in surface waters in agricultural watersheds. Two environmental tracers, δ18O and electrical conductivity (EC), were monitored in tile drainage (draining 12 ha) and stream water (draining nested catchments of 6‐5700 ha) from 2000 to 2008 in the semi‐arid agricultural Missouri Flat Creek (MFC) watershed, near Pullman Washington, USA. Tile drainage and streamflow generated in the watershed were found to have baseline δ18O value of ?14·7‰ (VSMOW) year round. Winter precipitation accounted for 67% of total annual precipitation and was found to dominate streamflow, tile drainage, and groundwater recharge. ‘Old’ and ‘new’ water partitioning in streamflow were not identifiable using δ18O, but seasonal shifts of nitrate‐corrected EC suggest that deep soil pathways primarily generated summer streamflow (mean EC 250 µS/cm) while shallow soil pathways dominated streamflow generation during winter (EC declining as low as 100 µS/cm). Using summer isotopic and EC excursions from tile drainage in larger catchment (4700‐5700 ha) stream waters, summer in‐stream evaporation fractions were estimated to be from 20% to 40%, with the greatest evaporation occurring from August to October. Seasonal watershed and environmental tracer dynamics in the MFC watershed appeared to be similar to those at larger watershed scales in the Palouse River basin. A 0·9‰ enrichment, in shallow groundwater drained to streams (tile drainage and soil seepage), of δ18O values from 2000 to 2008 may be evidence of altered precipitation conditions due to the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) in the Inland Northwest. Copyright © 2009 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords:isotope hydrology  tile drain  environmental tracers  streamflow generation  watershed hydrology
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