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CIVE 633 - ENVIRONMENTAL HYDROLOGY
 
WETLAND HYDROLOGY AND WATER QUALITY 
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 - The flow and storage volume determine the length of time that water spends in the wetland and, thus, the opportunity for interactions between 
waterborne substances and the wetland ecosystem.
  - Wetlands lose water via streamflow, groundwater recharge and evapotranspiration.
  - Continuous source treatment wetlands would normally be isolated from groundwater.
  - Constructed treatment wetlands usually have uniform bottoms, and an absence of flow pattern effects.
  
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DEFINITION OF HYDROLOGIC TERMS
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 - Hydraulic loading rate q (HLR); cm/d, m/d, m/yr.
  
 
 
 
- Mean water depth h (d): m, cm.
  - Wetland water volume V; m3
  - Nominal detention time t; days.
  
 
- Superficial velocity v; m/d.
  - Hydroperiod: Used to designate all attributes of the water regime. Also, the number of days per year that there is surface water at a given wetland.
  
 
- Over any budget period, each flow rate adds or removes a corresponding volume  of water:
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Vi - Vo + Vc - Vb - Vgw + Vsm + Vr - Ve = ΔVstored
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in which:
 
- Vb= bank loss volume
 - Vc= catchment runoff volume
 - Ve= evaporated volume
 - Vgw = volume infiltrated to groundwater
 - Vi = input wastewater volume
 - Vo= output wastewater volume
 - Vr = rain volume
 - Vsm = snowmelt volume
 - ΔVstored = change in water storage in wetland. 
  
   
 
- Wetlands often cause improvements in quality for flow-through waters.
 - Wetlands do not produce perfectly pure water.
 - Nutrients are typically present at low levels in natural wetlands.
 - P is at low levels, often below 0.05 mg/L.
 - Organic nitrogen is formed in wetlands as a bioproduct of biomass decomposition.
 - N is low in natural wetlands, from 1 to 2 mg/L.
 - Nitrate and nitrite nitrogen are usually absent from natural wetland waters.
 - Denitrification is efficient in the natural wetland environment because the necessary carbon source
is present together with the anoxic conditions that favor the utilization of nitrate as an electron acceptor.
 - Heavy metals are not present in natural wetland waters in high concentrations.
  
 
 
- The limnologist views the wetland as a shallow lake and emphasizes the water chemistry.
 - The  soil scientist  views the wetland as a waterlogged soil and emphasizes the wetland substrate.
 - The  engineer  views the wetland as a reactor vessel and emphasizes the degradation processes.
 - The  botanist  views the wetland as a water garden and emphasizes the plants and their taxonomy.
 - The  hydrologist  views the wetland as a vegetated channel.
 - The  ecologist  is concerned with types and communities of plants and animal species.
 - All points have merit, and there is danger in a narrow view.
 - Fig. 6-17 shows a simplified view of the wetland biogeochemical cycle.
  
 
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