Reedbed hydrology and water requirements

Stodmarsh National Nature Reserve includes the largest reedbed in Southern England and is an important habitat for breeding waders and several rare bird species, including Bitterns. A succession of drought years in the 1990s brought the issue of the hydrology and water requirements of the wetland to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Peacock, Catherine
Other Authors: Hess, Tim M.
Published: Cranfield University 2003
Subjects:
551
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.273954
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-273954
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-2739542018-05-12T03:22:50ZReedbed hydrology and water requirementsPeacock, CatherineHess, Tim M.2003Stodmarsh National Nature Reserve includes the largest reedbed in Southern England and is an important habitat for breeding waders and several rare bird species, including Bitterns. A succession of drought years in the 1990s brought the issue of the hydrology and water requirements of the wetland to the attention of managers and there is concern about future water supplies to the reserve. This study aims to calculate the amount of water required by the site in order to maintain optimum habitat conditions. The greatest area of uncertainty in the water balance is the evapotranspiration rate of the reedbeds and therefore a secondary aim is to increase understanding of this flux. Detailed hydrological measurements were carried out over two years to establish the water balance of the site. Evapotranspiration was measured using the Bowen ratio technique, accompanied by additional physiological and meteorological measurements. Results showed that evapotranspiration from reeds was generally less than reference evapotranspiration and that stornatal resistance was the most important factor controlling evapotranspiration rates. The hydrology of the site was modelled using a thirty year historical data series to quantify the return periods of flood and drought conditions of different severity. These were used to predict water resource requirements and availability and confidence limits were attached to the results. In 70% of years, summer deficits in the rainfall-evapotranspiration balance require the addition of water from the Lampen Stream. In 10% of these years, the entire surmner discharge of the Lampen Stream would be insufficient to meet site water requirements and an additional source of water is required. Competition with other water users and limits on abstraction will increase the number of years an additional water source is required. In addition future climate change is likely to increase summer water requirements whilst decreasing resource availability.551EvapotranspirationCranfield Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.273954http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/3836Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 551
Evapotranspiration
spellingShingle 551
Evapotranspiration
Peacock, Catherine
Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
description Stodmarsh National Nature Reserve includes the largest reedbed in Southern England and is an important habitat for breeding waders and several rare bird species, including Bitterns. A succession of drought years in the 1990s brought the issue of the hydrology and water requirements of the wetland to the attention of managers and there is concern about future water supplies to the reserve. This study aims to calculate the amount of water required by the site in order to maintain optimum habitat conditions. The greatest area of uncertainty in the water balance is the evapotranspiration rate of the reedbeds and therefore a secondary aim is to increase understanding of this flux. Detailed hydrological measurements were carried out over two years to establish the water balance of the site. Evapotranspiration was measured using the Bowen ratio technique, accompanied by additional physiological and meteorological measurements. Results showed that evapotranspiration from reeds was generally less than reference evapotranspiration and that stornatal resistance was the most important factor controlling evapotranspiration rates. The hydrology of the site was modelled using a thirty year historical data series to quantify the return periods of flood and drought conditions of different severity. These were used to predict water resource requirements and availability and confidence limits were attached to the results. In 70% of years, summer deficits in the rainfall-evapotranspiration balance require the addition of water from the Lampen Stream. In 10% of these years, the entire surmner discharge of the Lampen Stream would be insufficient to meet site water requirements and an additional source of water is required. Competition with other water users and limits on abstraction will increase the number of years an additional water source is required. In addition future climate change is likely to increase summer water requirements whilst decreasing resource availability.
author2 Hess, Tim M.
author_facet Hess, Tim M.
Peacock, Catherine
author Peacock, Catherine
author_sort Peacock, Catherine
title Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
title_short Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
title_full Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
title_fullStr Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
title_full_unstemmed Reedbed hydrology and water requirements
title_sort reedbed hydrology and water requirements
publisher Cranfield University
publishDate 2003
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.273954
work_keys_str_mv AT peacockcatherine reedbedhydrologyandwaterrequirements
_version_ 1718636693685272576