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Multi-millennial streamflow dynamics in two forested watersheds on Vancouver Island, Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Kendrick J. Brown*
Affiliation:
Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada Departments of Biology and Earth and Environmental Science, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, Canada Department of Marine Geology and Glaciology, Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland, Copenhagen, Denmark Royal British Columbia Museum, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
Gerrit Schoups
Affiliation:
Department of Water Management, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands
*
*Corresponding author at: Natural Resources Canada, Canadian Forest Service, 506 West Burnside Road, Victoria, British Columbia V8Z 1M5, Canada. E-mail address:kendrick.brown@nrcan.gc.ca (K.J. Brown).

Abstract

Holocene streamflow was reconstructed for two rivers on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada in 500-yr intervals. The San Juan River watershed is located on the wetter western side of the island, whereas the Koksilah River watershed is positioned on the drier eastern side. Both watersheds are forested. To reconstruct streamflow, temporal changes in precipitation (estimated using a pollen-based transfer function) and evapotranspiration were established for each watershed and integrated into a water balance model, calibrated using modern data. While seasonal streamflow variability was maintained throughout the Holocene, with greater flow in the winter relative to the summer, the amount of discharge has changed markedly through time. Lowest simulated flow occurred in the earliest Holocene, with low-flow conditions beginning earlier in the year and extending later into the fall. Such conditions may have inhibited salmon from using many of the smaller rivers in the region. Streamflow steadily increased throughout the early Holocene so that by ca. 6500 cal yr before present near-modern flow regimes were established. As climate changes in the future, the San Juan and Koksilah watersheds are expected to remain as pluvial hydroclimatic regimes, though with an extended season of low flow similar to conditions during the early Holocene.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
University of Washington

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