Agriculture and Agriculture et AgriFood Canada Agroalimentaire Canada

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Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Gross and Effective Drainage Area Delineation

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Gross and Effective Drainage Area Delineation in the Prairie Provinces Presentation at PPWB Prairie Hydrology Workshop January 29, 2013

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Overview l l l l Concepts

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Overview l l l l Concepts Why is this of concern to the PPWB? Background Manual Process Migration to GIS Environment Recent Changes What Does the Future Hold?

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Concepts l l Stichling and Blackwell

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Concepts l l Stichling and Blackwell (1957) presented a paper proposing the concept of fluctuating drainage area by year, by season, by event Godwin and Martin (1975) presented a paper refining the concept of gross, effective and dead drainage areas

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Gross Drainage Area “The gross drainage

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Gross Drainage Area “The gross drainage area of a stream at a specified location is that plane area, enclosed by its drainage divide, which might be expected to entirely contribute runoff to that specified location under extremely wet conditions. The gross drainage boundary is the drainage divide (i. e. the height of land between adjoining watersheds). ”

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Effective Drainage Area “The effective drainage

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Effective Drainage Area “The effective drainage area is that portion of a drainage basin which might be expected to entirely contribute runoff to the main stream during a flood with a return period of two years. This area excludes marsh and slough areas and other natural storage areas which would prevent runoff from reaching the main stream in a year of ‘average runoff’. ”

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Dead Drainage Area “Drainage is considered

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Dead Drainage Area “Drainage is considered dead if there is no outflow from an area even under very wet conditions. This situation is common on the Canadian Prairies where major depressions having sloughs and shallow lakes with no outlets are usually associated with dead drainage. A dead drainage basin includes all of the area tributary to such a depression. ”

Why is this of concern to the PPWB? • • Need drainage areas that

Why is this of concern to the PPWB? • • Need drainage areas that are acceptable to all member agencies For purposes of apportionable flow determination, only projects within the effective drainage area are considered as depletions to the natural flow

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Background l l 1970 - PFRA,

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Background l l 1970 - PFRA, as part of an IHD Study, undertook task of delineating drainage areas (543 stations) Early 1970 s - Need for standardization 1975 - at PPWB’s request, PFRA accepted responsibility for delineating areas on streams; covered by Master Agreement on Apportionment; commitment reaffirmed in June 2003 1978 - Hydrology Memorandum #25 (1191 stations) and 3 subsequent addendums

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada l l l 1983 - Hydrology

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada l l l 1983 - Hydrology Report #104 (1687 stations) with 8 subsequent addendums (Addendum #8 published in 2001 included 2689 stations) 1994 - Decision made to migrate data base and process to a GIS environment Late 1990 s - digitizing lines and developing a GIS process 2001 - Completed migration from manual to GIS environment 2008 - Current GIS version (8) includes entire Prairie Provinces area (3312 stations)

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Manual Process l l l Time

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Manual Process l l l Time consuming and resource intensive Difficult to update data base Limited product usability

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Index Cards and Summary Reports

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Index Cards and Summary Reports

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Migration to GIS Environment l Process

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Migration to GIS Environment l Process - digitize delineated boundaries - develop gross & effective polygons - develop linkage network - compare manual & GIS tabulations to check/confirm linkages

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Migration to GIS Environment l Benefits

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Migration to GIS Environment l Benefits - data base easy to update/maintain - quick automated revision of areas - easy access of data base by users - unlimited application potential

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Recent Changes l l Association of

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Recent Changes l l Association of all dead drainage areas with a drainage basin Addition of “artificial” stations to give complete coverage of Prairies

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Ongoing Enhancements l l Continue to

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada Ongoing Enhancements l l Continue to refine delineations - use 1: 20, 000 scale coverage where available - check delineations using digital NTS maps (DEMs) Incorporate local information provided by users

Current (Version 8, 2008) Product http: //www. agr. gc. ca/nlwissnite/index_e. cfm? s 1=data_donnees&s 2=details

Current (Version 8, 2008) Product http: //www. agr. gc. ca/nlwissnite/index_e. cfm? s 1=data_donnees&s 2=details &s 3=lc-ct&page=wb-bv_plus

What Does the Future Hold? ? ? ? – PFRA no longer exists, and

What Does the Future Hold? ? ? ? – PFRA no longer exists, and there is no mandate in the current organization to continue drainage area delineation activities International Harmonization of Watershed Boundaries and Hydrographic Features (IJC) Development of Watershed Delineation Tool – for specific projects, not for drainage area database maintenance

Features of the Watershed Delineation Tool http: //www. agr. gc. ca/watersheddelineation Delineate watershed boundaries

Features of the Watershed Delineation Tool http: //www. agr. gc. ca/watersheddelineation Delineate watershed boundaries anywhere within the Canadian Prairies Produce maps and hydrology reports containing standard watershed information Delineated watershed boundary and area Contributing and non-contributing areas Longest flow path, stream length and slope, draiange density Location of WSC gauging stations Download watershed boundaries to standard geographic formats (KML or shape file) Easy to use and interactive

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada QUESTIONS? ? ?

Agriculture and Agriculture et Agri-Food Canada Agroalimentaire Canada QUESTIONS? ? ?