Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Werner, A. 2007. Seasonality of the water balance of the Sooke Reservoir, BC, Canada. MSc Thesis, Uvic.
Organization Uvic
URL https://dspace.library.uvic.ca/bitstream/handle/1828/289/Thesis_AreliaWerner_%5BDec202007%5D.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Abstract/Description or Keywords Climate change and population growth is putting increased pressure on water supply.
However, detailed water-balance information, which would assist with management is
lacking for major reservoirs around the world. This information is particularly critical in midlatitude
northern Mediterranean climates where evaporation is a potentially important waterbalance
component.
This study examines the seasonality of the water balance for the Sooke Reservoir in
western Canada, a major water supply for the City of Victoria, British Columbia. Evaporation
is estimated with three evaporation models, Penman, Priestley-Taylor, and Hamon and the
results are compared. Inflows are estimated with the contributing-area approach and the HBVEC,
hydrologic model. Finally, a worst-case drought scenario is created.
If conditions of low precipitation and high evaporation like those found in the study
period were to persist, water levels would become critically low during the third dry season
and by the fifth season if water restrictions were put in place.
Information Type thesis
Regional Watershed Vancouver Island South
Sub-watershed if known Sooke Lake
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Arelia Werner
Contact Email [email protected]