Drainage Basin System
- Drainage basins are areas of land where precipitation (rain or snow melt) drains downhill into a body of water such as a river, lake, wetland or ocean
- Drainage basins are open systems with inputs, transfers and outputs
- Features of a drainage basin include:
- Watershed
- Source
- Tributary
- Confluence
- Floodplain
- Mouth
Diagram showing the features of a drainage basin
Drainage basin features
- After falling as precipitation, water can take many different routes before it reaches its end point
- Water can be stored in the system for a few days, years or centuries in aquifers
Diagram of the hydrological cycle
The hydrological cycle
Inputs, Flows, Outputs and Stores in the Drainage Basin
Inputs | Flows | Stores | Outputs |
Precipitation |
Throughflow Surface run-off (overland flow) Groundwater(base) flow infiltration Percolation |
Cryosphere Channel stores Vegetation Soil Aquifers Atmosphere as water vapour |
Transpiration Evaporation Sublimation |
Inputs
- Precipitation is the primary input into the drainage basin
- Precipitation is rainfall, snow, frost, hail and dew
- Key characteristics of precipitation impacting local hydrology (movement of water) include:
- Total amount of precipitation
- Intensity
- Type (e.g. snow or rain)
- Geographic distribution
- Variability
Flows
Infiltration
- Infiltration is the process where water permeates, or is absorbed by the soil
- Infiltration capacity is the maximum rate at which rain can be absorbed in a given condition
- Infiltrated water becomes chemically enriched as it collects minerals and organic acids from vegetation and soil
- Plant roots create fine channels for percolation known as percolines
Surface runoff
- Overland flow (surface runoff) occurs when precipitation exceeds the infiltration rate or when the soil becomes saturated
- High precipitation intensity and low infiltration capacity lead to common surface runoff in areas like semi-arid regions and cultivated fields
- Surface flow happens near streams and river channels
- Throughflow refers to water moving naturally through soil pipes and percolines
- Base flow is the constant part of a river's discharge supplied by groundwater seepage into the riverbed, which slightly increases after wet periods
Stores
Vegetation
- Vegetation interception is when water remains on the surface of the leaves before evaporation
- Interception loss varies based on vegetation type
- Coniferous trees intercept more water in winter
- Deciduous trees intercept more water in summer
Soil
- Soil moisture is subsurface water within the soil
- Field capacity is the retained water level after excess drainage and near saturation
- Wilting point is the moisture range causing permanent plant wilting and setting plant growth limits
Aquifers
- Aquifers serve as significant water reserves
- Water in aquifers moves slowly and absorbs rainfall that would otherwise rush into streams
- Aquifers help maintain stream flow during extended dry spells
- Aquifers can lead to springs, which can become the source of streams or rivers
- Groundwater is subsurface water that percolates slowly into the rock beneath the soil
- Percolation speed depends on rock permeability
- Carboniferous limestone and chalk percolation speed can be relatively fast
- The permanently saturated zone in rocks and sediments is the phreatic zone
- The upper layer is known as the water table
- Seasonally variability: aquifers are higher in winter due to increased precipitation
- The seasonally wet and dry zone is called the aeration zone
- Groundwater accounts for 96.5% of all freshwater on Earth but it can take up to 20,000 years to recycle
Aquifer
Aquifer
Groundwater recharge
Type of recharge | How groundwater recharges |
Infiltration | Through total precipitation at ground surface |
Seepage | Through banks and beds of surface water |
Leakage and inflow | From adjacent rocks and aquifers |
Artificially | From irrigation and reservoirs |
Cryosphere
- The cryosphere includes Earth's snow and ice
- It contains up to 66% of the world's freshwater
- Over 97% of Earth's water is salty and freshwater resources are limited
- High-latitude and high-altitude regions store significant snow and ice
- Seasonal melting plays a key role in altering the basin's hydrological cycle
Outputs
- Evaporation is the conversion of liquid or solid substances into a gas
- Evaporation:
- Involves the transformation of precipitation into water vapour in the atmosphere
- Is most prominent over oceans and seas and is influenced by climatic conditions
- Increases under warm, dry conditions
- Decreases under cold, calm conditions
- Factors affecting evaporation include:
- Temperature
- Humidity
- Wind speed
- Availability of water
- Vegetation
- Surface colour
Evapotranspiration
- Transpiration is the release of water vapour from living plants through their leaves and into the atmosphere
- Evapotranspiration (EVT) represents the primary source of water loss
- EVT accounts for nearly 100% of annual precipitation in arid areas and 75% in humid regions
- Evaporative losses can occur over ice and snow fields, barren rock slopes, desert areas, water surfaces and bare soil
- Potential evapotranspiration is determined by the availability of moisture.
The water budget
- Water budgets are the annual balance between inputs and outputs
- Water budgets can impact soil water availability
- The balances can be calculated at various scales, from global to local
- Water budgets at the regional level tell us the amount of water that is available for human use
- On a local scale, the water budget can tell us how much water is available in the soil
Diagram showing the water budget
Water budget
- The water budget uses the following equation: P + Qin = ET + ∆S + Qout
- P = precipitation (rain, snow, etc.)
- Qin = water flow into the watershed
- ET = quantity of evapotranspiration from soils, surface water, plants, etc.
- ∆S = Change in water storage
- Qout = sum of water flowing out of the watershed
Factors influencing the water budget
Factors that can affect the water budget |
How the water budget is affected |
Permeable rocks and porous soils |
Encourage infiltration and percolation, which means the flow is slowed down and there is an increased storage in the water basin |
Dense forests |
Intercept rainfall, absorbing water through the canopy |
Shape, relief and size of drainage basin |
Influence amount of water flowing overland |
Vegetation density |
Affects patterns of water flow and stores in the basin |
Seasonality |
There will be more water in wet seasons, which will create a water surplus |
Climate |
Determines the amount and type of precipitation that transfers through a river basin |