Abstract
for 1997 GLOBE Airlie Conference
Stream Response to Snowmelt and
Rain
Roger C. Bales
Department of Hydrology and Water
Resources
University of Arizona
Streams can experience
dramatic and rapid changes
in chemical composition in the days following
the
onset of snowmelt, or following a large rain. Large
inflows of
dilute, acidic snowmelt or rainfall
runoff that has had little contact
with soil
generally result in a lowering of stream pH,
alkalinity,
dissolved solids and temperature. With
runoff from rain the largest
effect may occur when
flows are highest, when dilution of stream water
with rainfall is greatest, With snowmelt the
greatest effect may
begin well before peak flow,
since a large fraction of chemical species
are
washed out of the snowpack with the first
meltwater. Spring
snowmelt may also coincide with
the period when fish, zooplankton,
amphibians or
macroinvertebrates are producing young. In the
early
stages of life many aquatic organisms are
particularly sensitive to
changing environmental
conditions, making spring runoff a critical period
in the life of a stream. We have field data from a
few well-studied
streams that illustrate the
chemical changes associated with snowmelt or
rain
runoff. GLOBE hydrology data, especially when
sampling is done
weekly, can also capture in-stream
changes resulting from snowmelt and
rainfall.