What is a river catchment?
Delimited by the watershed which is the boundary separating land draining to one river/stream from land draining to adjacent rivers (Gregory, 2000)
What is the water balance equation?
P = Q + E +∆ (I + M + G + S)
What is a hyetograph?
The plot of rainfall on a hydrograph
What are the 3 key areas to be concerned with in rivers and river catchments?
Water quantity, Water quality, Land use and management
What issues are we concerned with in rivers and river catchments? (Water quality)
What issues are we concerned with in rivers and river catchments? (Water quantity)
What issues are we concerned with in rivers and river catchments? (land use and management)
6 key hydrological processes
What is precipitation?
“The release of water from the atmosphere to reach the surface of the earth” (Davie and Quinn, 2019, p19)
What conditions are needed to form precipitation?
What are the main types of precipitation?
rain, drizzle, sleet, snow (grains / pellets), hail, dew and frost, mist and fog
How are dew and frost formed?
How are mist and fog formed?
How is precipitation distributed globally?
How is precipitation distributed regionally?
more rainfall on the west as that’s where the prevailing wind comes from
Altitude (Orographic precipitation)
Why is precipitation important for water quantity?
Why is precipitation important for water quantity?
What is evaporation?
“The transferral of liquid water into a gaseous state and it’s diffusion into the atmosphere” (Davie and Quinn, 2019, p49)
What does evaporation need?
What is evaporation’s water supply?
Directly from a water surface
————>Lake, pond, puddle, droplets etc.
Soil water evaporates from near the surface
————>Leads to soil moisture gradient that draws water from deeper in the soil towards the surface
————>Water brought to surface by plants using osmosis in their rooting system
Water supply from soil less than that from open water
What is evaporation’s main source of energy?
Main source of energy from the sun
o Heats up the atmosphere, air, and water itself
Also heat stored in buildings from domestic heating systems
o Makes surrounding air warmer
o Urban environment in winter: main heat source could be from buildings and not sun
Advective energy – originates from elsewhere and is transported to the evaporative surface i.e. latent energy that arrives in cyclonic storm systems
What is atmospheric mixing in terms of evaporation?
What is evapotranspiration?
o Evaporation from the soil matrix
o Transpiration from plants – evaporation from leaves though stomata (tiny hole via which gaseous water will leave the plant into the atmosphere)
What is evapotranspiration rate controlled by?
Rate controlled by opening/ closing of leaf stomata:
Soil water availability
Wet soil = faster transpiration
Plant species
Plant’s ability to transfer water from the soil to its leaves
Plant’s ability of regulate its stomata
Ability of the atmosphere to absorb the transpired water
Humidity
Atmospheric mixing – wind speed