Jasper Oshun
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey - NewarkHumboldt State University
Subject Areas: | Hydrogeology, Ecohydrology, water resources, critical zone, socio-hydrology |
Recent Activity
ABSTRACT:
Study region:
Humid puna of the Central Andes, Perú
Study focus:
Bofedales, or peat-forming wetlands, are a characteristic feature of the humid puna
- a high elevation, seasonally dry grass- and shrub-land throughout the Central Andes. Despite
the hydrologic importance of the humid puna for downstream communities, and the inference
that bofedales play an important role, few studies have explored the hydrology of this ecosystem,
and none have quantified bofedal water yield to streams. We designed a 3-year study in
the Upper Ramuschaka Watershed (URW), a 2.12 km2 humid puna catchment sustaining a
perennial stream used for irrigation downstream. We monitored hydrologic fluxes through the
URW, periodically measured discharge in 19 nested subbasins across wet and dry seasons, and
characterized the structure, hydraulic properties, and storage capacity of four bofedales.
New hydrological insights for the region:
Unit runoff is consistently higher in subbasins with
greater bofedal coverage. High porosity peat fills in the wet season via groundwater recharge
and drains slowly through underlying layers with low hydraulic conductivity. Bofedales cover
11.6% of the URW and store 105,000 10,000 m3 of water seasonally. In the dry season,
bofedales yield 49 5 mm to streams, equivalent to 20 – 98% of the URW’s dry season runoff.
Bofedales regulate drainage from the humid puna to downstream communities and are therefore
vital to local and regional water security.
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Created: April 24, 2023, 7:27 p.m.
Authors: Oshun, Jasper
ABSTRACT:
Study region:
Humid puna of the Central Andes, Perú
Study focus:
Bofedales, or peat-forming wetlands, are a characteristic feature of the humid puna
- a high elevation, seasonally dry grass- and shrub-land throughout the Central Andes. Despite
the hydrologic importance of the humid puna for downstream communities, and the inference
that bofedales play an important role, few studies have explored the hydrology of this ecosystem,
and none have quantified bofedal water yield to streams. We designed a 3-year study in
the Upper Ramuschaka Watershed (URW), a 2.12 km2 humid puna catchment sustaining a
perennial stream used for irrigation downstream. We monitored hydrologic fluxes through the
URW, periodically measured discharge in 19 nested subbasins across wet and dry seasons, and
characterized the structure, hydraulic properties, and storage capacity of four bofedales.
New hydrological insights for the region:
Unit runoff is consistently higher in subbasins with
greater bofedal coverage. High porosity peat fills in the wet season via groundwater recharge
and drains slowly through underlying layers with low hydraulic conductivity. Bofedales cover
11.6% of the URW and store 105,000 10,000 m3 of water seasonally. In the dry season,
bofedales yield 49 5 mm to streams, equivalent to 20 – 98% of the URW’s dry season runoff.
Bofedales regulate drainage from the humid puna to downstream communities and are therefore
vital to local and regional water security.