Integrated modeling of groundwater–surface water interactions in a tile-drained agricultural field: The importance of directly measured flow route contributions

J.C. Rosemeijer, Y. van der Velde, R.G. McLaren, F.C. van Geer, H.P. Broers, M.F.P. Bierkens

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

51 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Understanding the dynamics of groundwater–surface water interaction is needed to evaluate and simulate water and solute transport in catchments. However, direct measurements of the contributions of different flow routes from specific surfaces within a catchment toward the surface water are rarely available. For this study, we physically separated the tile drain discharge toward a 43.5 m ditch transect from the groundwater–plus–overland flow routes. Direct groundwater flow and ephemeral overland flow were jointly captured in three sheet pile in-stream reservoirs, while the effluent from three tile drain outlets was collected in vessels. Our flux measurements showed that, in response to a rainfall event, the tile drain contribution to the total ditch discharge decreased from 80% to 28%. We used these flow route measurements to calibrate a field-scale integrated water transport model. The HydroGeoSphere code was used because it simultaneously solves the flow regimes in the variably saturated domain, the tile drain domain, and the surface flow domain. This simultaneous solution is needed for a correct representation of the mutual interactions between groundwater flow, tile drain flow, and ditch water flow. Our model produced a flow distribution between the flow paths which deviated only 2% from the measured flow distribution. A sensitivity analysis showed that model parameters related to tile drain entrance resistance and to the resistance to water flow through the surface water system controlled the water flow route distribution but with little effect on groundwater levels. This indicates that a model calibration based on groundwater levels alone does not necessarily produce a correct representation of the flow route contributions.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberW11537
Number of pages10
JournalWater Resources Research
Volume46
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • nitrate concentrations
  • catchment
  • soil
  • quality
  • uncertainty
  • management
  • separation
  • hydrology
  • discharge
  • dynamics

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