Impacts of Land Use Change on the Natural Flow Regime: A Case Study in
the Meramec River Watershed in Eastern Missouri, USA
Abstract
The natural flow regime within a watershed can be considered as the
expected temporal patterns of streamflow variation in the absence of
human impacts. While ecosystems have evolved to function under these
conditions, the natural flow regime of most rivers has been
significantly altered by human activities. Land use change, including
the development of agriculture and urbanization, is a primary cause of
the loss of natural flow regimes. These changes have altered discharge
volume, timing, and variability, and consequently affected the structure
and functioning of river ecosystems. The Meramec River watershed is
located in east central Missouri and changes in land use have been the
primary factor impacting flow regimes across the watershed. In this
study, a watershed model, the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), was
developed to simulate a long-term time series of streamflow (1978-2014)
within the watershed. Model performance was evaluated using statistical
metrics and graphical technique including R-squared, Nash-Sutcliffe
efficiency, cumulative error, and 1:1-ratio comparison between observed
and simulated variables. The calibrated and validated SWAT model was
then used to quantify the responses of the watershed when it was a
forested natural landscape. An Indicator of Hydrologic Alteration (IHA)
approach was applied to characterize the flow regime under the current
landcover conditions as well as the simulated natural flow regime under
the no land use change scenario. Differences in intra- and inter-annual
ecologically relevant flow metrics were then compared using SWAT model
outputs in conjunction with the IHA approach based on model outputs from
current and no land use change conditions. This study provides a
watershed-scale understanding of effects of land use change on a river’s
flow variability and provides a framework for the development of
restoration plans for heavily altered watersheds.