Isotope-derived young water fractions in streamflow across the tropical Andes mountains and Amazon floodplain
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Published:2023-08-02
Issue:15
Volume:27
Page:2883-2898
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Burt Emily I.ORCID, Coayla Rimachi Daxs Herson, Ccahuana Quispe Adan Julian, Atwood Abra, West A. JoshuaORCID
Abstract
Abstract. The role of topography in determining water transit times and pathways
through catchments is unclear, especially in mountainous environments
– yet these environments play central roles in global water, sediment, and
biogeochemical fluxes. Since the vast majority of intensively monitored
catchments are at northern latitudes, the interplay between water transit,
topography, and other landscape and climatic characteristics is particularly
underexplored in tropical environments. To address this gap, here we present
the results of a multiyear hydrologic sampling campaign (twice-monthly and
storm sampling) to quantify water transit in seven small catchments
(<1.3 km2 area) across the transition from the Andes mountains
to the Amazon floodplain in southern Peru. We use the stable isotope
composition of water (δ18O) to calculate the fraction of
streamflow comprised of recent precipitation (“young water fraction”) for
each of the seven small catchments. Flow-weighted young water fractions
(Fyw) are 5 %–26 % in the high-elevation mountains, 22 %–52 % in the mid-elevation mountains, and 7 % in the foreland floodplain. Across these
catchments, topography does not exert a clear control on water transit;
instead, stream Fyw is apparently controlled by a combination of
hydroclimate (precipitation regime) and bedrock permeability. Mid-elevation
sites are posited to have the highest Fyw due to more frequent and
intense rainfall; less permeable bedrock and poorly developed soils may also
facilitate high Fyw at these sites. Lowland soils have low Fyw due
to very low flow path gradients despite low permeability. The data presented
here highlight the complexity of factors that determine water transit in
tropical mountainous catchments, particularly highlighting the role of
intense orographic precipitation at mountain fronts in driving rapid
conveyance of water through catchments. These results have implications for
the response of Earth's montane “water towers” to climate change and for
water–rock reactions that control global biogeochemical cycles.
Funder
National Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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