Friday, May 1, 2026

Michichi Creek Alberta water sources

 

Michichi Creek boardwalk and creek


Michichi Creek is a significant prairie stream in central Alberta that drains into the Red Deer River near Drumheller, drawing its water almost entirely from the eastern Alberta prairie rather than any mountain source.

Basin Overview

Michichi Creek has the largest subwatershed of the four main Red Deer River tributaries near Drumheller, covering approximately 6,204 km² of gross drainage area, with an effective (contributing) drainage area of around 720 km². The creek flows through portions of Kneehill County, Starland County, Wheatland County, and Special Area No. 2 before joining the Red Deer River. The hydrometric gauge station (WSC 05CE020) is located at Drumheller, with a peak design discharge of 68.0 m³/s.[1][2][3][4]

Primary Water Sources

1. Spring Snowmelt (dominant source)
Unlike the Red Deer River itself — which is fed by Rocky Mountain snowmelt and summer rainfall — Michichi Creek's watershed sits entirely within the eastern Alberta prairie. Flooding and peak flows along Michichi Creek typically occur between late March and early April as a direct result of spring snowmelt runoff over frozen soils. This is characteristic of Canadian Prairie streams, where runoff predominantly occurs during the spring melt freshet over frozen ground.[5][4][6]

2. Summer Rainfall Runoff
Agricultural runoff from summer convective rainstorms contributes episodic flows. Land use in the Michichi watershed is predominantly agricultural, with crops and pastures covering approximately 64–77% of the total watershed area. This impervious-like character means intense summer rainfalls can generate rapid surface runoff with limited infiltration.[3][7]

3. Agricultural Drainage
The watershed's heavy agricultural use means tile drainage, field ditches, and surface drains all contribute to the creek's streamflow, particularly during spring and after significant rain events. Minimal wetland cover (only 0.67–5.53% of the subwatershed) means there is little natural storage to buffer flows.[3]

4. Michichi Reservoir / Michichi Dam
A reservoir on Michichi Creek is located approximately 25 km north of Drumheller, near the hamlet of Michichi. This dam regulates some flow in the lower reaches of the creek, and the reservoir has a surface area of about 15.6 hectares. A beaver dam further downstream in the Starland County area creates a year-round wetland, adding minor local water storage.[8][9][10]

5. Groundwater / Baseflow
Given the semi-arid prairie setting and deep clay-rich soils, groundwater contributions to baseflow are limited. The region's soils are rarely saturated, and the effective drainage area (720 km²) is considerably smaller than the gross basin area (1,170 km²), indicating that large portions of the watershed contribute little or no runoff in most years.[2][11][6]

Geology and Sediment

The lower reaches of Michichi Creek near Drumheller pass through the Alberta Badlands, where the bedrock transitions from Quaternary clay-rich alluvium upstream to outcropping Cretaceous shales, bentonites, ironstones, and coal bands. This geology is directly responsible for the notably high total mercury and suspended sediment concentrations documented in Michichi Creek — the highest of any of the four main Drumheller-area tributaries — as badlands erosion readily contributes fine, mercury-associated sediment particles to the stream.[3][7]

Confluence and Downstream Hydrology

Michichi Creek joins the Red Deer River near Drumheller. Together with Kneehills Creek, Threehills Creek, and the Rosebud River, it drains the central region of the Red Deer River watershed. Its relatively short distance of approximately 5.3 km from the Starland County boundary to the Red Deer River confluence has been the focus of flood hazard modelling.[3][12]

In summary, Michichi Creek is a prairie-sourced stream with water coming overwhelmingly from spring snowmelt, supplemented by summer agricultural runoff and minor groundwater baseflow, with the Michichi Dam providing some local regulation and storage.


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Prairie Pothole Wetlands: Water Levels and Subsoil Moisture Dynamics

 



Overview

The relationship between water levels in Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) wetlands and subsoil moisture is profoundly coupled — neither can be understood in isolation. Wetland pond water levels and the moisture stored below ground in the vadose zone (unsaturated soil) and shallow groundwater are parts of a single, integrated hydrological system. Subsoil moisture acts both as a sink that must be replenished before ponds can form or persist, and as an ongoing driver of water loss from existing ponds via plant transpiration and lateral groundwater exchange. This bidirectional feedback governs pond permanence, seasonal timing, drought resilience, and landscape-scale hydrology across Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and the northern Great Plains.


The Integrated Water Balance Framework

Prairie potholes are closed topographic depressions underlain predominantly by clay-rich glacial till deposited during the Pleistocene. Because mean annual potential evapotranspiration exceeds precipitation across the PPR — the region maintains a persistent atmospheric moisture deficit — wetlands depend critically on lateral water inputs from their surrounding catchments, primarily as snowmelt runoff and occasional summer storm runoff.[1][2]

The full water balance of a prairie wetland is expressed as:


where  encompasses both surface storage (the pond itself) and subsurface storage (soil moisture and shallow groundwater),  is precipitation,  is evapotranspiration,  is catchment runoff,  is groundwater exchange, and  is overflow between connected wetlands. The critical insight here is that subsoil moisture is not separate from the pond — it is a formally integrated component of wetland storage.[3][1]


Subsoil Architecture: Glacial Till and the Vadose Zone

The glacial tills underlying most prairie potholes have two hydraulically distinct zones that directly govern how surface water levels and subsoil moisture interact:[^1]

  • Near-surface high-K zone (0–4 m depth): Relatively high hydraulic conductivity (>1 m yr¹) due to fracturing and weathering. This is where active lateral groundwater exchange between the pond and its moist margin occurs.
  • Deep low-K zone (below 4–5 m): Hydraulic conductivity drops to 10³ to 10² m yr¹. Flow through this zone is too slow to meaningfully affect the short-term wetland water budget.

The capillary fringe — the zone just above the water table that remains nearly saturated due to capillary forces — is particularly important in clay-rich tills. When the water table is shallow (within 1–2 m of the surface), the capillary fringe leaves very little air-filled pore space available to absorb infiltrating water. Conversely, as the water table deepens during dry periods, a large volume of air-filled void space develops in the vadose zone, dramatically increasing subsoil water storage capacity.[^1]

Research at St. Denis National Wildlife Area in Saskatchewan quantified this directly: the vadose zone beneath Wetland 109 in January 2002, after a very dry year, had a total subsurface storage capacity of roughly 500 mm — comparable to the surface storage capacity of a 1.5 m deep pond, the typical overflow depth for small prairie wetlands.[^1]


Seasonal Dynamics: How Water Levels and Subsoil Moisture Interact

Spring Recharge

The defining seasonal event in prairie pothole hydrology is spring snowmelt. Winter soils in the PPR are often deeply frozen, and ice crystals in clay-rich soils dramatically reduce infiltration capacity, directing most snowmelt water laterally into wetland depressions as surface runoff. This causes sharp, rapid rises in pond water levels — the most prominent feature of annual hydrographs across the region.[4][5][^1]

However, antecedent subsoil moisture strongly modulates this response. If the water table was deep going into winter (low antecedent moisture), the wetland can absorb large volumes of snowmelt before a surface pond forms at all — the water table must first rise through the vadose zone deficit before the pond appears. Long-term monitoring at Wetland 109 (Fig. 5 in Hayashi et al. 2016) shows water table rising from depths exceeding 5 m in dry winters to surface ponding in wet springs, with the timing depending entirely on subsurface moisture state.[^1]

Summer Recession

Once formed, pond levels decline throughout the growing season primarily through evapotranspiration rather than groundwater drainage. The mechanism is subtle: dense phreatophytic vegetation (willows, sedges) in the moist margin around the pond transpires directly from the water table or through the vadose zone. This plant water uptake depletes subsoil moisture and creates a hydraulic gradient that draws pond water outward through the high-K near-surface zone into the margins. The rate of pond recession is therefore directly linked to the width and density of the moist margin vegetation and the depth of the water table beneath it.[6][3][^1]

The recession rate  is approximated by:


where  is the width of the moist margin (typically 5–15 m across the PPR),  is the pond perimeter-to-area ratio, and  is the open-water evapotranspiration rate. Smaller ponds recede faster because their perimeter-to-area ratio is larger — meaning a greater fraction of their water budget is controlled by margin vegetation drawing water through the subsoil.[^1]

Dry Period: Subsurface Dominates

When ponds dry out — a frequent occurrence in ephemeral and seasonal wetlands — the relationship between wetland water levels and subsoil moisture becomes entirely subsurface. The water table beneath the former pond continues to decline as vegetation draws water upward. The rate slows after the growing season but continues through winter due to recharge to deeper zones and frost-induced redistribution of water.[3][1]

This creates a soil moisture memory effect: the depth of the water table at the end of a dry period directly determines how much snowmelt will be absorbed by the vadose zone versus generating surface ponding the following spring. A wetland that experienced a multi-year drought will have a deeply depleted water table and a large storage deficit; even a wet spring may not produce a visible pond if the snowmelt is consumed refilling the vadose zone.[7][1]


Bidirectional Groundwater-Moisture Feedbacks

Recharge Wetlands (Higher Landscape Positions)

Potholes situated at topographically higher positions within a wetland complex tend to lose water downward through their basins, recharging the local groundwater. When pond levels are high, the hydraulic head drives infiltration through the high-K zone into surrounding subsoils. These wetlands show greater fluctuation in both pond level and subsoil moisture, and they more frequently go dry, exposing organic matter to aerobic decomposition and nutrient cycling.[8][9][^10]

Discharge Wetlands (Lower Landscape Positions)

Potholes in lower topographic positions receive shallow groundwater from adjacent higher-positioned wetlands and uplands. Their subsoil moisture remains higher and more stable, their water tables stay closer to the surface, and their ponds are more permanent. In Alberta, 47% of wetlands likely receive groundwater inflow, while 13% (mainly in the prairies) lose water primarily through evaporation, reflecting the range of recharge-discharge positions.[11][10][^12]

Seasonal Switching

Critically, the recharge/discharge function of an individual pothole is not fixed. It can switch seasonally (spring recharge to summer discharge), annually, and cyclically across drought-pluvial cycles. A wetland that recharges groundwater during a high-water spring may become a discharge wetland by midsummer as the surrounding upland soils dry and create an inward hydraulic gradient. This switching behaviour makes simple classification of potholes as purely "recharge" or "discharge" problematic for management purposes.[9][11]


Soil Texture, Topography, and Moisture Distribution

A four-year study at St. Denis NWA in Saskatchewan, measuring soil water storage up to 1.4 m depth along a 576 m transect, identified the dominant controls on subsoil moisture distribution in the PPR landscape:[^13]

Controlling Factor

Correlation with Soil Water Storage

Mechanism

Sand content

r = −0.57 to −0.73

Coarser texture = faster drainage, lower retention

CaCO₃ layer depth

r = 0.31 to 0.79

Impedes downward drainage, creates perching

Topographic wetness index

r = 0.47 to 0.67

Topographic convergence drives lateral moisture accumulation

Organic carbon

Consistent high contribution

Improves moisture retention capacity

Bulk density

r = −0.22 to −0.56

Denser soils = reduced pore space

Slope gradient

r = −0.41 to −0.56

Steeper slopes = faster lateral drainage away from depression


The CaCO₃ (caliche) layer deserves particular attention for Alberta prairie contexts. This carbonate-rich horizon — found widely in Chernozemic and Solonetzic soils of the parkland and grassland zones — acts as a low-permeability barrier that creates perched water tables above it during wet periods and concentrates subsoil moisture in the profile zone above the layer. Its depth strongly correlates with measured soil water storage. Salt redistribution in pothole wetlands occurs through the same hydrological mechanisms that drive CaCO₃ accumulation, linking subsoil moisture dynamics to soil salinization patterns.[14][13]


Landscape Connectivity: Fill-Spill and Subsoil Moisture Thresholds

Prairie pothole wetlands are not independent — they function as a network, with subsoil moisture state governing whether precipitation events generate local ponding or landscape-scale connectivity.[15][16]

The fill-and-spill mechanism describes how closed depressions must fill to their spill threshold before water moves laterally to adjacent depressions. This is directly modulated by antecedent subsoil moisture: when upland soils are dry, precipitation infiltrates rather than generating runoff to fill potholes. When soils are already near-saturated, even modest precipitation generates high-connectivity surface flow linking multiple wetlands across the landscape.[16][17]

Research shows no detectable threshold below which wetland drainage does not affect runoff regime — even 10% wetland removal measurably changes connectivity and runoff. Simulations show that during extremely wet years (with soils already saturated), runoff depths could double compared to wetter-than-average years when wetlands are removed. This demonstrates that the subsoil moisture state of the entire landscape — not just the immediate wetland basin — governs how wetland water levels respond to any given precipitation event.[^16]


Long-Term Cycles: Drought, Deluge, and the Wetland Continuum

The PPR is subject to decadal-scale wet-dry precipitation cycles driven by large-scale atmospheric patterns. These cycles create sustained shifts in subsoil moisture state that produce non-linear responses in wetland water levels:[18][1]

  • Persistent drought: Water tables drop metres below the surface; subsoil moisture deficit builds over years; formerly semi-permanent wetlands dry completely; even above-average precipitation years may not restore surface ponding until the vadose zone storage deficit is refilled.[7][1]
  • Transition to deluge: As cumulative precipitation exceeds the accumulated deficit, water tables rise rapidly; subsoil soils become near-saturated; wetlands that rarely connected begin to fill-and-spill, linking previously isolated basins; landscape-scale runoff increases disproportionately relative to precipitation increases.[7][1]

Since the early 1990s, an extended period of high precipitation has driven a "wet continuum" shift across much of the Canadian prairies, with corresponding increases in pond numbers, lake levels, streamflow, and soil moisture. At St. Denis, Wetland 109 shifted from a seasonal pond regime (mean duration 4.5 months/year, 1968–2001) to a semi-permanent regime (mean 11.5 months/year, 2005–2015) — not because of a step change in climate, but because cumulative subsoil recharge crossed a threshold.[7][1]


Land Use Effects on the Water Level–Subsoil Moisture Relationship

Upland Vegetation and Crop Type

The type of vegetation covering the wetland catchment profoundly alters the partitioning of precipitation between infiltration into subsoils and runoff to the wetland:[19][1]

  • Perennial grassland: Dense root systems and high organic matter increase macroporosity and infiltration; soils absorb more precipitation, reducing runoff to wetlands. Paradoxically, long-term studies at St. Denis showed that conversion of cropland to perennial grass dried out small wetlands, because upland grasses captured soil moisture that would otherwise have runoff to fill potholes.[^19]
  • Fall-cultivated cropland: Low surface roughness and poor snow trapping allow drifting snow to accumulate in wetland margins; also, frozen clay in tilled fields generates high spring runoff, loading wetland ponds.[^1]
  • Perennial forages vs. annual crops: Forages extract more moisture from subsoils in fall, creating a larger storage deficit going into winter and thereby increasing the soil's capacity to absorb spring snowmelt rather than generating runoff.[^19]

Wetland Drainage

Artificial drainage of potholes removes surface storage capacity, but also alters subsoil moisture dynamics across the connected landscape. Drainage lowers local water tables and desiccates adjacent subsoils, reducing the moisture available for capillary rise to support wetland margin vegetation in remaining wetlands. The loss of even small fractions of wetland storage area (as low as 10%) measurably increases downstream runoff sensitivity, particularly during near-average years when subsoil storage would normally absorb much of the precipitation input.[^16]


Climate Change Implications

Hydrological models consistently project that warming will increase evapotranspiration rates faster than precipitation can compensate, resulting in lower average water levels and longer dry periods in PPR wetlands despite potential increases in total precipitation. Key subsoil moisture mechanisms driving this include:[20][6]

  • Earlier snowmelt: Warming advances melt timing while soils are still frozen, concentrating runoff into a narrower window; summer subsoil recharge from rainfall decreases.[^20]
  • Enhanced growing-season ET: Higher temperatures and longer frost-free seasons drive deeper depletion of the vadose zone over summer, creating larger autumn–winter deficits.[18][20]
  • Altered recharge timing: A coupled land–groundwater model for the PPR found that warmer winters delay snow accumulation and advance early melting, leading to an earlier but lower-rate recharge season; annual groundwater recharge is projected to increase 25–50% in some regions due to longer recharge windows, but with reduced peak rates.[^20]

In Alberta specifically, Grassland-region wetlands are more vulnerable to evaporative drawdown under dry conditions compared to Parkland wetlands, and restored wetlands may be somewhat less vulnerable to drawdown than natural ones, potentially due to altered catchment hydrology.[^21]


Applied Management Considerations

Understanding the water level–subsoil moisture relationship has direct implications for wetland management, restoration, and agricultural planning in the PPR:

  • Restoration timing and site selection: Restored wetlands in deeply drained basins may take several wet years to establish stable water levels as subsoil storage deficits are refilled — surface inundation immediately after restoration does not indicate hydrological recovery.
  • Agricultural land management: Maintaining perennial cover on uplands reduces spring runoff to wetlands but also increases subsoil moisture depletion, creating a management tension between upland moisture conservation and wetland pond permanence.[^19]
  • Flood risk: Landscapes with near-saturated subsoils (post-deluge conditions) have minimal subsoil storage buffer; subsequent precipitation events convert almost entirely to runoff, dramatically increasing flood risk across watersheds.[16][7]
  • Monitoring: Water table monitoring beneath dry ponds — not just surface water levels — is essential for characterizing wetland hydrological state, since significant hydrological activity continues in the subsurface during dry periods.[3][1]
  • Salinity management: Pothole salinization (a key concern in Alberta's parkland) is directly linked to subsoil moisture-driven capillary rise from saline groundwater; water table depth and subsoil moisture gradients determine salt accumulation rates in both wetland basins and adjacent upland soils.[22][14]


References

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  • Hydrology of prairie wetlands: Understanding the integrated surface ... - Wetland managers and policy makers need to make decisions based on a sound scientific understanding ...
  • [PDF] ESTIMATING WATER STORAGE OF PRAIRIE POTHOLE WETLANDS
  • [PDF] Interannual Water-level Fluctuations and the Vegetation of Prairie ... - Variation in annual precipitation during a cycle alters water depths in pothole wetlands, and these ...
  • [PDF] A Review of Canadian Prairie Hydrology - University of Saskatchewan - This report reviews research on the hydrological cycle, runoff generation, hydrological modelling an...
  • [PDF] Climate Change and Prairie Pothole Wetlands—Mitigating Water ... - Monthly precipitation and temperature values are balanced using soil moisture, stored water, runoff,...
  • [PDF] Heterogeneous Changes to Wetlands in the Canadian Prairies ... - Since the early 1990s, an extended period of high precipitation has caused a hydrological regime shi...
  • Prairie Pothole Region | Ducks Unlimited - Some larger PPR wetlands may be hydrologically connected to groundwater, but smaller wetlands are of...
  • Recharging Groundwater | Blue Earth County, MN - Official Website - The recharge/discharge function of pothole wetlands has been shown to change seasonally, annually, c...
  • "Assessing recharge and discharge across the prairie pothole ... - Identifying and quantifying groundwater recharge and discharge zones has applications in predicting ...
  • Classifying the hydrologic function of prairie potholes with remote ... - We found that wetlands receiving groundwater discharge responded differently over the time period th...
  • Regional Patterns in the Water Balance of Alberta's Wetlands - In terms of outflow, 13% of wetlands (located mainly in the prairies) lose water mainly through evap...
  • Factors controlling soil water storage in the hummocky landscape of the Prairie Pothole Region of North America - Biswas, A., Chau, H. W., Bedard-Haughn, A. K. and Si, B. C. 2012. Factors controlling soil water sto...
  • Predictive mapping of wetland soil types in the Canadian Prairie ... - With respect to soil salinization, wetland soil CaCO3 accumulation and general soil salinity accumul...
  • [PDF] Assessing runoff sensitivity of North American Prairie Pothole ... - Abstract. Wetland drainage has been pervasive in the North. American Prairie Pothole Region. There i...
  • Assessing runoff sensitivity of North American Prairie Pothole ... - There is strong evidence that this drainage increases the hydrological connectivity of previously is...
  • [PDF] Fill and spill drives runoff connectivity over frozen ground - Temporal connectivity in a prairie pothole complex. Wetlands 23 (1) ... The fill-spill hydrology of ...
  • [PDF] Vulnerability of Northern Prairie Wetlands to Climate Change - We explored the broad spatial and temporal patterns across the PPR between climate and wetland water...
  • Sustainable Agricultural Land Management around Wetlands on the ... - Perennial forages extract more moisture than annual crops in fall prior to winter freeze up. The net...
  • [PDF] Modeling groundwater responses to climate change in the Prairie Pothole Region | Semantic Scholar - Abstract. Shallow groundwater in the Prairie Pothole Region (PPR) is predominantly recharged by snow...
  • Use of water isotope tracers to characterize the hydrology of prairie ... - The aim of this study is to assess the relative importance of input water sources and evaporative wa...
  • [PDF] Native Prairie Protocol for Salt-Affected Wellsites Scientific Rationale ... - Where the water table is below a certain critical depth water rising by capillarity would not cause ...