Watershed
Watershed
Watershed
Fact Sheet
Climate
Climate is the major force shaping the land and controlling streamflow. The climate of an area is
determined by the area’s latitude, elevation, vegetation, topography and nearness to the oceans or
other large water bodies. Together these factors determine temperatures, humidity, wind,
precipitation and evaporation in a watershed. Weathering factors, such as rain, snow, wind,
glaciers and temperature changes, erode soil and rock formations and change the topography of
the watershed. Climate also affects streamflow, which creates and changes stream channels.
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W eathering is the chemical and physical actions of air, wind, temperature changes, precipi-
tation, flowing water, plants, bacteria and other animal life that cause rocks to decay, erode
and eventually crumble into soil.
Geology
The geology of a watershed is important because it influences topography, direction of water
flow, shape of the drainage basin, stream bed materials, water quality and biological productivity.
Geologic forces cause the earth’s surface to rise or fall and, along with weathering, determine the
topography of the watershed.
Geology affects where and how water moves in a watershed. For
Gbranch
eomorphology is the
of geology that
example, karst areas like the Ozark region have geology of
limestone or dolomite that have openings where water has
studies the shape of the
dissolved the rock along cracks and between layers. These
earth’s surface and the
changes that take place openings act as direct routes to funnel water very quickly to the
over time. water table. These routes not only affect quantity of water in
Fluvial geomorphology streams and groundwater, but can allow pollutants from the land
is the study of how water
surface to quickly contaminate the groundwater system.
shapes the land and how
the landscape affects
water flow and channels. The geology determines the types of bedrock formations, or
parent materials, and the associated soils of the watershed. The
parent materials and the soils produced from them help determine the water quality, biological
productivity and aquatic life of a stream. By supplying the materials that make up the bottoms
and banks of channels, parent material and soils also affect how vulnerable a stream is to erosion.
Parent materials also provide controls on how stream channels can develop. Bedrock limits how far
down into the earth a stream
can easily dig its channel.
Bedrock can also control the
lateral, or sideways,
movement of the stream. The
best examples of bedrock
controlling lateral movement
of streams in Missouri are
bluffs along streams like the
Missouri, Niangua and Big
Piney rivers (Figure 2).
2 Figure 2
Topography
Topography is the shape and physical features of land. The topography of a stream channel and
its watershed reflects the geology of the watershed. In turn, watershed topography helps produce
the pattern and distribution of stream channels. Topography of a watershed also determines the
steepness of the land surface and stream channels. We also know this steepness as slope, grade or
gradient. The height and steepness of the hills, floodplains and channels contribute to the erosive
power of the water in a watershed and its stream channels. Steep slopes allow the force of gravity
to quickly accelerate the speed of flowing water. The faster water flows the more energy or power
it has to erode and move soil, sand, gravel, boulders and debris.
Topography also affects sinuosity of streams. Channels with low gradients usually meander back
and forth, while steep channels do not wind back and forth as much but often have more riffles.
Hydrology
Figure 4
The four basic parts of the hydrologic cycle are precipitation, evapotranspiration, storage and
runoff. Precipitation includes rain, hail, snow and other forms of moisture falling from the
atmosphere to the earth. Evapotranspiration returns water vapor to the atmosphere through
evaporation from surface water and through transpiration by plants. Most of the precipitation
falling on Missouri is intercepted by depressions or vegetation and is then evaporated or
transpired back to the atmosphere. Water that remains in wetlands and lakes or soaks through the
ground and infiltrates to groundwater is called storage. Runoff, or overland flow, is water that
hits the earth and flows over land and into channels.
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Base flow or groundwater flow is the precipitation that percolates deep into the soil and is slowly
released over weeks or months to a stream channel or spring. Base
flows sustain many streams and springs during long, dry periods. Eis thevapotranspiration
process of
Water Shapes the Watershed transferring moisture
from the earth to the
atmosphere by
Precipitation and runoff sculpt the land surface. Each watershed has its
evaporation of water
own runoff patterns and erosion rates that depend on geology, and transpiration by
vegetation, land use and topography. Changes in runoff can increase plants. Solar energy,
erosion and sedimentation of the land surface. Excessive runoff can temperature and wind
cause water on the
cause downstream flooding and accelerated erosion of the land. Too earth’s surface to
much runoff can also cause destructive amounts of streambed and change to vapor
streambank erosion as channels adjust over time to carry more water. through evaporation.
Transpiration is the
High runoff can also increase the amounts of soil, sand, gravel, process by which
nutrients and pollutants flushed into streams. water is evaporated
from the pores of plant
leaves.
Wcertain
ater at the top of a stream has a
amount of stored energy
Soils
called potential energy. The Soil is unconsolidated (loose) mineral matter on the
elevation above sea level surface of the earth. Soil can support plants because
determines how much potential physical, chemical and biological processes have
energy the water has. The farther
above sea level the water is, the changed it. In turn, plants and their roots influence the
more potential energy it has. soil.
As water moves downstream, its The most important features of soils are their ability to
potential energy is converted to soak-up, hold and transport water, support plants and
kinetic energy - the energy of cycle nutrients. Soils directly affect the kinds of
motion. Most of this kinetic energy
is changed to heat through friction vegetation that can grow along a stream, on floodplains
between the water and the stream and in the watershed. Soils can reduce water and air
channel. pollution by buffering agricultural fertilizers and
The kinetic energy that isn’t pesticides, organic wastes and industrial chemicals.
changed to heat does the work of Many physical, chemical and biological properties
eroding and transporting sediment. determine the quality of a soil. Soil depth, texture,
The energy expended to do this
water-holding capacity, porosity, nutrient and mineral
work is known as stream power.
Stream power is the energy that levels, organic matter content and actions of organisms
forms and shapes stream channels. like moles, earthworms and bacteria all affect soil
quality.
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Rreaches
unoff, precipitation that
the ground and quickly Under natural conditions, soil at a given location can reach a
flows to a stream, equals balance between inputs and exports of substances. This
Precipitation minus balance depends on local climate, geology, vegetation and
Evapotranspiration minus
topography. Inputs of minerals by weathering and of organic
Groundwater Storage.
matter by decomposition of leaf, root and other plant materials
are balanced by export of materials. Some organic
materials are decomposed and returned to the
atmosphere. Nutrients dissolved in water are cycled
Serosion,
oil erosion is classified as splash
erosion by sheet flow and
through vegetation or percolate through the soil to erosion by channelized flow. Splash
streams. Solid mineral particles and some organic erosion is caused by raindrops, which
fall at a speed of about 30 feet a
materials are removed by erosion of the soil. second, or 20 miles an hour (Figure 5).
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The erosion that soil undergoes in this state of balance is called the geologically normal rate of
erosion. Human influences on land usually increase the rate of erosion by significant and
sometimes catastrophic amounts. The term accelerated erosion is often used to describe this
increase. Accelerated erosion not only can drastically reduce soil quality but can cause
downstream deposition that causes flooding, erosion and destruction of habitats.
The rate at which soil can soak up rainfall is called its infiltration capacity. Runoff occurs when
more rainfall reaches the ground than the ground can soak up. Infiltration rates depend on the
texture and structure of surface soils, vegetative cover and land use. Soil type, soil depth and
infiltration capacity determine the amount of subsurface flow. Highly permeable soil at the
surface, such as tilled soils or forest litter, can allow water to flow downhill and underground to a
channel. When the infiltration capacity is reached, water begins to collect in surface depressions.
When the depressions are filled, water starts to move downhill as overland flow - runoff. As it
travels down slopes, water gains velocity and has more energy to cause soil erosion. When the
water reaches a gentler slope its velocity slows and some of the soil it carries will be deposited.
Along with topography and geology, soils determine the route water will take after it falls on the
earth. Areas of level topography and deep soils, like northern Missouri, allow the rain and the
nutrients and chemicals it carries to slowly infiltrate and percolate down into the water table. Soil
can filter out many pollutants. In areas of hilly terrain and shallow soils, more of the infiltrated
water flows to channels as subsurface flow.
Gravelly streambank soils fill with water and drain quickly. However, the low cohesiveness of
gravelly streambanks makes them very susceptible to erosion by flowing water, which can pull
gravel and particles of soil from the bank.
On the other hand, clay streambanks are very cohesive and more resistant to erosive energy of
flowing water. Unfortunately, clay banks are prone to slide or slump failures. For example,
during a flood the clay banks slowly soak up water, but when the flood recedes the water drains
slowly from the bank. The weight of the water in the clay bank and low shear strength can cause
the bank to slump or fall.
Streambanks are rarely made up of only one kind of soil, though. Different layers of soils are
often present in a streambank. This is called soil stratification. Along with bank height and
rooting depth of bank and riparian vegetation, the number, sequence and types of soil layers
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strongly influence how a bank will erode. It is often difficult to predict how a stratified bank will
erode because the rate of rise, peak, duration and rate of fall of each flood will dictate which
layers are most likely to erode.
Runoff rates and amounts are usually excessive in watersheds with too much timber clearing,
row cropping, grazing, paving, urbanization and other types of development. Runoff increases in
these situations because less water is allowed to infiltrate to groundwater or return to the
atmosphere through transpiration. Unnaturally high runoff rates produce more frequent, larger
and faster-rising floods. Likewise, more runoff can increase erosion of the land surface. More
flooding can increase streambed and streambank erosion as channels adjust to the new channel-
forming flows.
Many conditions and activities in a watershed can influence a stream. Uncontrolled erosion and
runoff from construction sites; row cropping of highly erodible land; construction of houses,
buildings and parking lots that prevent infiltration and speed runoff of precipitation; removal of
riparian vegetation; improper disposal or excessive application of industrial, agricultural or
household chemicals; point and nonpoint sources of nutrients and runoff from strip mines are
some ways receiving streams can be degraded. These and other factors contribute to poor water
quality, unstable stream channels and unhealthy biological
communities. Setting up erosion control practices on
Tfloodwaters
he muddy color of
is caused by
construction areas and farmland, limiting the amount of
suspended sediment - soil
impervious area associated with urban developments and suspended by the speed
maintaining or establishing areas of timber and grasses are and properties of water.
important efforts toward reducing the negative effects on
streams caused by our uses of the land.
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Watershed Size
Watersheds can be big or small. The bigger the stream, the bigger the watershed - at least within
areas of similar climate, geology and topography. A small intermittent Ozark stream may have a
surface watershed of only a few acres, while the drainage basin area of the Mississippi River is
about 1,151,000 square miles (Figure 7).
Mississippi River
In small watersheds, flood levels watershed
in the mainstem stream mostly
depend on how long it takes for
water to run off of the land. Small
watersheds have quick peaks and
rapid declines in flood flow. Flood
levels in mainstem streams of
large watersheds depend on how
long it takes for water to work its
way down the network of chan- Missouri River
nels. Large watersheds produce watershed
floods that last longer but do not Figure 7
peak as quickly. In much the same way it affects delivery of runoff, watershed size influences
deliver of sediment eroded from the land and channels.
The shape, or topography, of the land surface determines the size of a surface watershed. Surface
watersheds can be outlined on maps that show land contours. Fairly accurate watershed
boundaries can be drawn using 7.5 minute topographic maps. By following the ridge lines and
other topographic divides on a map, you can draw the boundary of the surface watershed that
contributes runoff into a particular stream. A drop of water that falls outside the boundary, called
the watershed divide, will flow into another watershed unless the drop infiltrates to the recharge
area of a stream in the outlined surface watershed.
Since the recharge area of a stream is underground, it is usually not as easy to identify as its
surface watershed. Scientists commonly use harmless dye tracings to determine the recharge area
of groundwater contributions. For some streams that receive much of their water from springs,
the recharge area can be much larger than the surface watershed. The recharge area of a stream
can be so large that it is important to focus stream conservation efforts on surface watersheds and
recharge areas.
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Bennett Spring Watershed
When outlined on a map, the boundaries of a and Recharge Area
stream’s surface watershed and recharge area Watershed
are usually not the same, but they do have Recharge Area
large areas that overlap (Figure 8). Remem-
Bennett
bering that watersheds shown on most maps
Spring
only match the surface watershed is impor-
tant. Recharge areas are usually excluded or
outlined separately. Lebanon
Stream Order
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produce fairly large streams that are only second or third order streams.
Realizing that inconsistencies between maps and cartographers exist is important, and using
different map scales can result in unreliable stream ordering. Knowing the map scales and stream
ordering method is important whenever you are comparing stream orders.
Watershed Shape
Watersheds have many different shapes. Like watershed size, watershed shape affects how
quickly precipitation and sediment are delivered to the mouth of the mainstem (Figure 10).
Figure 10
A watershed with a round shape produces fast, high flood peaks because water has a shorter
distance to travel from headwaters to mouth. Long, narrow watersheds have longer distances for
water to travel and will have more moderate flood peaks (Figure 11).
Figure 11
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Drainage Network Patterns
A drainage network is the entire system of channels on the land surface that transports water,
sediment and other natural and manmade materials from a surface watershed. Each watershed
has its own, unique network of channels. Drainage networks can consist of streams ranging from
small, high gradient headwater channels to broad, meandering streams like the lower Mississippi
River.
The look or pattern of a drainage network depends on the geology and topography of the water-
shed. A stream network evolves as flowing water follows the paths of least resistance. The
network gradually grows as the flowing water begins to create channels. Over time the network
enlarges as the main channels and tributaries erode their beds and work their way up slopes. This
upstream growth also means sediment is continually being added to and transported by the
stream system. Eventually the number of tributaries decreases as continuous weathering reduces
the relief of the topography and tributaries join (Figure 12 A-C).
A B C
Figure 12
One way to describe watersheds is by their drainage patterns. Most drainage networks in
Missouri show a dendritic pattern, which looks like the branching of a tree.
Drainage patterns, along with the shape of the watershed, will affect the timing and delivery of
floodwaters and sediment to each part of the network.
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We’re All Tied Together
Climate, geology, topography, hydrology and soils all play a part in the formation and function of
watersheds. These factors provide habitat, nutrients, flow and water quality that aquatic
organisms need to survive. Human-induced alterations of watershed-forming factors are
common and can change our watersheds, sometimes permanently. Common indications of these
changes include flashier streams, steep, eroded streambanks, the filling of stream pools,
shallower water depth and many other indicators. Organisms that live in a stream are thereby
affected most by watershed changes, but people are affected too. The losses of land by erosion
and valuable water resources impact everyone. Therefore, by minimizing land use impacts in the
watershed, we can help the resource, aquatic life and ourselves.
Each of us influences our watersheds by our actions on the land. Therefore, we are all
responsible for the health of our stream systems.
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