globalchange  > 气候变化事实与影响
DOI: 10.5194/hess-21-6031-2017
Scopus记录号: 2-s2.0-85036663673
论文题名:
Hydrogeological controls on spatial patterns of groundwater discharge in peatlands
作者: Danielle K; H; , Boutt D; F; , Clement W; P; , Hatch C; E; , Davenport G; , Hackman A
刊名: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
ISSN: 10275606
出版年: 2017
卷: 21, 期:12
起始页码: 6031
结束页码: 6048
语种: 英语
Scopus关键词: Carbon ; Discharge (fluid mechanics) ; Ecology ; Ecosystems ; Geological surveys ; Ground penetrating radar systems ; Groundwater ; Groundwater flow ; Hydrology ; Nutrients ; Remote sensing ; Restoration ; Seepage ; Wetlands ; Ecological restoration ; Ground Penetrating Radar ; Ground water discharge ; Hydrologic conditions ; Regional groundwater ; Remote sensing technology ; Site-specific evaluation ; Subsurface structures ; Groundwater resources ; anthropogenic effect ; dewatering ; discharge ; ecosystem structure ; groundwater ; hydrogeology ; peatland ; remote sensing ; restoration ecology ; spatial analysis ; wetland ; Massachusetts ; United States ; Vaccinium macrocarpon
英文摘要: Peatland environments provide important ecosystem services including water and carbon storage, nutrient processing and retention, and wildlife habitat. However, these systems and the services they provide have been degraded through historical anthropogenic agricultural conversion and dewatering practices. Effective wetland restoration requires incorporating site hydrology and understanding groundwater discharge spatial patterns. Groundwater discharge maintains wetland ecosystems by providing relatively stable hydrologic conditions, nutrient inputs, and thermal buffering important for ecological structure and function; however, a comprehensive site-specific evaluation is rarely feasible for such resource-constrained projects. An improved process-based understanding of groundwater discharge in peatlands may help guide ecological restoration design without the need for invasive methodologies and detailed site-specific investigation.

Here we examine a kettle-hole peatland in southeast Massachusetts historically modified for commercial cranberry farming. During the time of our investigation, a large process-based ecological restoration project was in the assessment and design phases. To gain insight into the drivers of site hydrology, we evaluated the spatial patterning of groundwater discharge and the subsurface structure of the peatland complex using heat-tracing methods and ground-penetrating radar. Our results illustrate that two groundwater discharge processes contribute to the peatland hydrologic system: diffuse lower-flux marginal matrix seepage and discrete higher-flux preferential-flow-path seepage. Both types of groundwater discharge develop through interactions with subsurface peatland basin structure, often where the basin slope is at a high angle to the regional groundwater gradient. These field observations indicate strong correlation between subsurface structures and surficial groundwater discharge. Understanding these general patterns may allow resource managers to more efficiently predict and locate groundwater seepage, confirm these using remote sensing technologies, and incorporate this information into restoration design for these critical ecosystems.
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资源类型: 期刊论文
标识符: http://119.78.100.158/handle/2HF3EXSE/78982
Appears in Collections:气候变化事实与影响

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作者单位: AECOM Technical Services, Rocky Hill, CT, United States; Department of Geosciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst, 611 N. Pleasant St., Amherst, MA, United States; Living Observatory at Tidmarsh Farms, 139 Bartlett Road, Plymouth, MA, United States; Massachusetts Division of Ecological Restoration, Suite 400, 251 Causeway St, Boston, MA, United States

Recommended Citation:
Danielle K,H,, Boutt D,et al. Hydrogeological controls on spatial patterns of groundwater discharge in peatlands[J]. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences,2017-01-01,21(12)
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