Water Stewardship Information Sources

Citation Foster, SB and Allen, DM. 2015. Groundwater-surface water interactions in a mountain to coast watershed: effects of climate change and human stressors. Advances in Meteorology 2015:22p.
Organization SFU
URL http://www.hindawi.com/journals/amete/2015/861805/abs/
Abstract/Description or Keywords Watersheds located within a mountain to coast physiographic setting have been described as having a highly interconnected surface water and groundwater environment. The quantification of groundwater—surface water interactions at the watershed scale requires upscaling. This study uses MIKE SHE, a coupled numerical model, to explore the seasonally and spatially dynamic nature of these interactions in the Cowichan Watershed on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada. The calibrated model simulates a transition of the Cowichan River from mostly gaining within the valley, to losing stream near the coast where groundwater extraction is focused. Losing and gaining sections correlate with geological substrate. Recharge across the watershed accounts for 17% of precipitation. Climate change is projected to lessen snowpack accumulation in the high alpine and alter timing of snowmelt, resulting in higher spring and winter river discharge and lower summer flows.
Information Type report
Regional Watershed Vancouver Island South
Sub-watershed if known Cowichan
Aquifer #
Comments
Project status complete
Contact Name Diana Allen
Contact Email [email protected]