Description
Hydrologic conditions (e.g., precipitation, runoff, storage, and annual water yield) and the disturbance of natural pathways (e.g., tiling, ditching, land use changes, and loss of water storage) has become the driver of many impairments in other Minnesota watersheds (MPCA 2012). These disturbances coupled with an increase in precipitation (i.e., total, frequency, and magnitude) have resulted in issues with: increased bank erosion, excess sediment, habitat degradation, and disturbance of natural flow regime. Hydrologic modification is the alteration or addition of water pathways and associated changes in volume by human activity. Those modifications can dramatically alter discharge due to changes in volume, timing, connectivity, or flow rates, particularly if the area was not a flow pathway in the past. The types of hydrologic modifications are vast, including the draining and filling of wetlands and lakes, ditching or draining formerly hydrologically disconnected basins, adding impervious surfaces across the basin, increasing drainage for increased transport of water (i.e., in urban and agricultural areas), straightening or constricting a natural flow path or river, and changing the timing and rate of delivery within the hydrologic system. Any increase in stream power (e.g., due to change in peak flows or increased frequency of bank full flows) will generate an increase in water yield (Lane 1955).
Date Issued
2015-05-11
Number of Pages
12
Decade
Associated Organization
Publisher
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (St. Paul, Minnesota)
Main Topic
Keywords
Publication Series
Status
Body of Water
Format
Rights Holder
Minnesota Pollution Control Agency
Rights Management
Public Domain