The Mechanics of Diurnal Thermal Stratification in River Pools:
Implications for Water Management and Species Conservation
Abstract
We examined conditions that form or prevent thermal stratification in
river pools using field measurements and statistical and
three-dimensional (3D) computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modeling. Our
motivation is to identify variables that control stratification for
exploitation to enhance or prevent thermal gradients as needed to
benefit species in rivers. One study pool (UT) is above water storage
reservoirs and receives natural flows, and the other pool (PT) is
regulated and receives unnaturally high, cold water in summer on the
Trinity River, California. Thermal stratification formed in UT pool in
spring at a critical flow of 1.01 m 3/s, peaked at 8.1
oC in summer, and exhibited diurnal formation and
destruction under sub-critical flows until fall. At PT pool, the 14.2 m
3/s baseflow caused mixing that prevented
stratification and formed a spatially homogenous thermal environment.
Statistical modeling indicated the daily range in air and inlet water
temperature at UT pool best correlated with the occurrence and strength
of stratification but were progressively irrelevant as flows increased
above the critical value. The 3D CFD model was verified by predicting
the observed critical flow and dynamics of stratification at UT pool and
isohytes observed at PT pool. The 3D model was then used to explore the
thermal stratification process. Results confirmed low flows are the main
variable for stratification to form, and the daily range in inlet water
temperature drives the strength of the thermal gradient. The model
estimated a critical discharge at PT pool of 2.0 m
3/s, twice that for UT pool owing to its 2.6-times
larger area, suggesting critical flows scale with pool size. Results
show that releasing critical and lower flows in summer on regulated
streams may conserve water and provide thermal gradients that benefit
poikilothermic species; alternately, higher than critical flows can
prevent stratification where needed to improve water quality.