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Abe 147

Watersheds in the Philippines have experienced significant degradation due to logging and land clearing, resulting in reduced forest cover and increased soil erosion. Soil erosion on about 45% of agricultural lands has reduced soil productivity and water retention capacity. Proper watershed management can provide sustainable water supply while conserving the environment. Key strategies include reforestation, terracing, cover cropping, and controlled drainage to reduce erosion and maintain water quality and supply.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
39 views8 pages

Abe 147

Watersheds in the Philippines have experienced significant degradation due to logging and land clearing, resulting in reduced forest cover and increased soil erosion. Soil erosion on about 45% of agricultural lands has reduced soil productivity and water retention capacity. Proper watershed management can provide sustainable water supply while conserving the environment. Key strategies include reforestation, terracing, cover cropping, and controlled drainage to reduce erosion and maintain water quality and supply.

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Miracle Lake
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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ABE147

Watersheds have been subjected to various forms of degradation such as indiscriminate logging &
kaingin, resulting loss of cover from 17 million ha in 1934 to 5.3 million ha in 2003.

But if properly managed, watershed can provide a continuing flow of water to a particular water body to
man-made "water use outlets".

About 45% of the arable lands in PH have been moderately to severrlg eroded. Approx. 5.2 M ha severely
eroded and 8.5 M ha are moderately eroded resulting to 30-50% reduction in soil prod. and water
retention capacity.

CONSERVATION ETHICS

- should be used to provide the greatest good for the greatest number for longest time

- leads to sustainable development where we meet current needs without compromising future gens

- dev that best meets present & future needs w/o damaging the envi and bio diversity

- 4R: Reduce, Recycle, Reuse, Rethink

SOIL EROSION CONTROL

- essential tk maintain the crop prod of soil as well to control sedimentation and pollution in streams and
lakes

- coir mats, woven geotextiles, non-woven geotextiles

- Reforestation

- Terracing

- Multiple Cropping

- Contouring

- Cover cropping

- Sloping Agricultural Land Technology

DRAINAGE/Sewerage
- essential to reclaim saline and sodic soils by leaching and to prevent salinity problems by maintaining a
low water table

- essential for permanent irrigated agriculture

- Ph no separate storm water and waste water systems

- Greywater: wastewater from sinks, showers, washing

THE HYDROLOGIC CYCLE

Precipitation = Runoff + EvapoTranspiration + Infiltration

@ Steady state: Precipitation = ET

Volume RO vs. Volume Infiltration will depend on

- Rate precipitation

- watershed characteristic

OCEAN STORAGE

- from ocean 96.5%, others: 3.5%

- vol: 321,000,000 cu. mi

- total global water : 332,500,000 cu.mi

- volume of world's ocean change because of climate change

- last glacial period: sea levek 400 ft lower than today

- last inter-glacial period: sea level 18 ft higher than today

- 3M years B.P. : Sea level 165 ft higher

Two Processes change liquid water into vapor

- Evaporation - 90%

- Transpiration - 10%
Evaporation

- liquid water is transformed into gaseous state

- into gas ceases when the gas reaches saturation

- manifested by a decrease in the temp of tge condensed phase

included in exam:

Types of Clouds, height of clouds from the surface

TRANSPIRATION

- process of water loss from plants through stomata (small openings on the underside of leaves

- passive process thag depends on: humidity of the atmosphere, moisture content of the soil

- only 1% of the water transpired used for growth

- transports nutrients from tge soil into roots and carries them to the various cells of plants

Accoubte for 10% of the moisture in the atmosphere depends on:

- temp, humidity, insolation, precipitation, soil type & saturation, wind, land slope

What percent of the Earths total vol. of water is stored in atmosphere?

- 0.001%, water vapor, clouds

- max. water retention in clouds is 10 days

PECIPITATION

- vapor that accumulates or freezes on condensation nuclei is acted on by gravity and falls to Earth
surface.

- rain , freezing rain, sleet, snow, hail

- primary connection in the water cycle that provides for tge delivery of atmospheric water to Earth

Meteorological Factors Affecting Surface Runoff

- Type of Precipitation
- Rainfall Intensity

- Rainfall Amount

- Rainfall Duration

- Distribution of rainfall over the drainage basin

- Direction of storm movement

- Precipitation that occured earlier and resulting soil moisture

- Meteorological conditions that affect evapotranspiration

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS AFFECTING SURFACE RO

- Land Use

- Vegetation

- Soil Type

- Drainage Area

- Basin Shape

- Elevation

- Topography, slopy area

- Drainage network patterns

- Ponds, lakes reservoirs, sinks w/c prevent/delay RO from continuing downstream

HUMAN FACTORS AFFECTING SURFACE RO

- Urbanization: more impervious surfaces reduce infiltration and accelerate water motion

- Removal of vegetation and soil: surface grading, artificial drainage network increases vol. RO and
shortens runoff time to streams from rainfall and snowmelt

MOST RO

- Drains to a creek, stream, river, ocean

- rarely runoff drains to a closed lake

- may be diverted for human uses


Lake & Swamps

- freshwater makes up 3% of all water on Earth, lakes and swamps account mere 0.29%

- 20% of all freshwater is in Lake Baikal in Siberia (638 km long, 80 km wide, 1620 m deep

- another 20% is in great lakes

Groundwater begins as INFILTRATION

- falls and infiltrates into subsurface soil and rock

- can remain in shallow soil layer

- might seep into stream bank

- may infiltrate deeper, recharging aquifer

- travel long distances

- may stay in storage as ground water

FACTORS AFFECTING INFILTRATION

- Precipitation

- Soil Characteristics

- Soil Saturation

- Land Cover

- Slope of the land

- Evapotranspiration

Infiltration replenished aquifer

slow process: groundwater moves slowly through the

Subsurface water

- as precipitation infiltrates, subsurface soil, it forms zones

*EVAPOTRANSPIRATION (Et) balances precipitation

*important consideration in agriculture because of the need to maintain soil moisture


*also important for open reservoirs because evaporation during the day may be significant

* unit of measure (mm/day)

INSTRUMENTS USE IN EVAPORATION

-atometer

-pan evaporation

-lysimer

Tree water uptake= Transpiration=10-1,000 L/day

*Curves on this sheet are for the case Ia=0.2S (Infiltration)

*Q=(P-0.2S)²/P+0.8S

Urban areas ➡️Increased infiltration by 25-70% ➡️Forested

INFILTRATION

- is the water that absorbed by the soil and into the bedrock

- inflitrated water feeds into the groundwater

Main factors that affect infiltration rated

- intensity and duration of rainfall

- topograph / slope

- type of land cover (type of vegetation)

- type of soil

- type of bedrock

Intruments to determine infiltration

Double Ring Infiltrometer

- inner ring is filled w/ water that is left to infiltrate into ground

- outer ring is used to control flow towards the ground and not horizontally
- unit of measure (mm/hr)

Water in Soil

- water lost through ET

- water that will join runoff through subsurface flow

- groundwater recharge

WATERSHED

- an area of land that drains water, sediment, and dissolved materials to a common outlet

- separated by drainage divides

- can be any shape & size

- catchment, drainage basin

- is the total land area that contributes to the flow of a particular water body

waterhsed may be:

- with or without nhabitants

- with or without vegetation

CLASSIFICATION OF WATERSHED

River basin - Over 1000 km²

Large Watershed - 500-100

Medium WH - 100-500 km²

Small WH - 10-100 km²

Micro WH - under 10 km²

STREAM ORDER

- Head water (first stream order)

- Confluences (second stream order)


- Outlet

Stream order - use to roughly define the size, and to some extent the strength of a stream

- ranges from 1st to 12th order, biggest is Amazon River

WATERSHED MANAGEMENT

- define the process of guiding and organizing land and other resources uses in watershed to provide
desired goods and service without adversely affecting the soil and water resources

- planning, organizing, staffing, directing, controlling

AIMS of Watershed

- improve rainwater to provide quality water and increased protection from flood and sedimentation
damage

- improved standard living

- main objective in all cases is to slow water movement to prevent soil transport

WATER MANAGEMENT STRATEGIES

- Policy

- Prevention

- Corrective

BENEFITS OF WATERSHED MNGT

Economic Benefits - water supply, forestry, agriculture, livestock, fishery, mining

Social Services - tourism, recreation, historical, cultural, health

Environmental Services - biodiversity, soil & water conservation, etc

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