River and Lake Characteristics of Reservoirs
Authored By: M. Scott
Reservoirs display characteristics of both rivers and lakes because they are formed by the damming of a river:
- Similar to rivers, reservoirs have longitudinal and lateral gradients in certain features:
- Current velocity decreases from the upper portion (where the river enters) toward the dam, and from mid-channel to the banks.
- Width generally increases from upper to lower portions of the reservoir.
- Channel depth increases from upper to lower portions of the reservoir, and decreases from mid-channel to the banks.
- Similar to lakes, large reservoirs can have vertical (depth) gradients of several important characteristics (Cole 1983):
- Light -- Light is attenuated by travel through water, constraining the growth of plants and algae to shallower, termed the euphotic zone.
- Temperature -- Solar radiation, like light, is absorbed rapidly by water. Deeper reservoirs can stratify into layers: a warm layer near the surface (epilimnion), a cold layer near the bottom (hypolimnion), and a temperature gradient between them termed the thermocline.
- Oxygen -- Oxygen is dissolved in water by surface exchange with the atmosphere, and from photosynthesis of aquatic plants and algae; at greater depths (and reduced light) oxygen can be depleted (anoxic).
The longitudinal transition from upstream river to downstream lacustrine characteristics can be seen as a series of zones in a reservoir (Soballe 1992). See figure below:
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Encyclopedia ID: p1485


