Abstract
Abstract. Karst development influences the hydrological response of
catchments. However, such an impact is poorly documented and even less
quantified, especially over short scales of space and time. The aim of this
article is thus to define karst influence on the different hydrological
processes driving runoff generation, including interbasin groundwater flow
(IGF) for elementary catchments at the storm-event timescale. IGFs are
estimated at the scale of the river reach, by comparing inlet and outlet
flows as well as the effective rainfall from the topographic elementary
catchment. Three types of storm-event descriptors (characterizing water
balance, hydrograph shape and lateral exchanges) were calculated for the 20
most important storm events of 108 stations in three French regions
(Cévennes Mountains, Jura Mountains and Normandy), representative of
different karst settings. These descriptors were compared and analysed
according to catchment geology (karst, non-karst or mixed) and seasonality
in order to explore the specific impact of karst areas on water balance,
hydrograph shape, lateral exchanges and hydrogeological basin area. A
statistical approach showed that, despite the variations with study areas,
karst promotes (i) higher water infiltration from rivers during storm
events, (ii) increased characteristic flood times and peak-flow attenuation,
and (iii) lateral outflow. These influences are interpreted as mainly due to
IGF loss that can be significant at the storm-event scale, representing
around 50 % of discharge and 20 % of rainfall in the intermediate
catchment. The spatial variability of such effects is also linked to
contrasting lithology and karst occurrence. Our work thus provides a generic
framework for assessing karst impact on the hydrological response of
catchments to storm events; moreover, it can analyse flood-event
characteristics in various hydro-climatic settings and can help with testing the
influence of other physiographic parameters on runoff generation.
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
Cited by
12 articles.
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