169-2 Are All Runoff Processes the Same? Soil Filling and Spilling, Transmission Loss and Connectivity Patterns at the Hillslope Scale.

See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Hydrology - Patterns and Process Interactions in Space and Time: I
Monday, November 3, 2014: 8:30 AM
Long Beach Convention Center, Room 102B
Share |

Jeffrey McDonnell, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, CANADA
Research on runoff processes has focused on the differences between the main divisions of runoff partitioning.  Indeed, our major advancements in runoff theory have come with new differentiations of various forms of overland flow and subsurface stormflow. These studies of ‘how runoff processes are different’ have resulted in our current summaries of runoff regimes conceptually (e.g. the Variable Source Area concept) and codified in our models (e.g. TOPMODEL and its derivatives). While such process differentiation was useful as new dominant forms of runoff were “discovered” in different climates with different soils, slope morphologies and vegetation cover, continued differentiation does not appear helpful for improved understanding of soil runoff dynamics and streamflow generation. We seem to have exhausted the main list of runoff classes some decades ago, with perhaps the last wave of minor updates to these processes coming in the 1980s and early 1990s in response to isotope tracing demonstrating the importance of stored water and clarifying  the differences between soil water velocities and celerities. This talk explores the similarities (and not differences) between all forms of runoff and suggests that across diverse environments, the sequence of soil filling and spilling, transmission loss and connectivity generation is common to all. I will attempt to show that by asking if all runoff processes are the same may be a new way to come at improved process measurement, understanding and prediction across diverse regions. I examine specific questions of: What can we learn about subsurface stormflow from overland flow (and vice versa)? Can we recognize things on the soil surface (where boundary conditions are visible) that may help guide new theory for the subsurface where such soil boundary controls are hidden? Examples are given from soil hydrology field sites in the USA (Georgia and Oregon), Canada and New Zealand.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soil Physics
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Hydrology - Patterns and Process Interactions in Space and Time: I