Visualizing Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

PROCESS DIAGRAM


/…iʅÞ`Àœœ}ˆVÊVÞViÊUʈ}ÕÀiÊx°£ä
✓✓THE PLANNER

distributed among the ocean, the land, and the atmo-
sphere (ˆ}ÕÀiÊx°£ä).
Water may evaporate from land and reenter the at-
mosphere directly. Alternatively, it may flow in rivers
and streams to lakes or the ocean. The movement of
water from land to rivers, lakes, wetlands, and the ocean
is runoff, and the area of land where runoff drains is a
watershed. Regardless of its physical form—solid, liquid,

Water in
atmosphere
13,000

71,000*

Evaporation from soil,
streams, rivers, and lakes
to form clouds in atmosphere

Percolation
through soil and
porous rock to
become
groundwater

Transpiration from vegetation
adds water to atmosphere

Runoff
to ocean
40,000

Ocean
1,350,000,000

25 percent of
water in
atmosphere
falls on land as
precipitation
111,000

Evaporation from
ocean surface to
form clouds in
atmosphere
425,000

Groundwater supplies
water to soil, streams,
rivers, and ocean
15,300,000

Movement of
moist air
40,000
75 percent of
water in
atmosphere
reenters ocean as
precipitation
385,000

Condensation
(cloud formation) 75 7757575 perpercceent oof
water inin

ttttttiioniionioon
aaatiotiotiooon)n)nnn)n

In the hydrologic cycle, water moves among the ocean, the atmosphere, the land, and
back to the ocean in a continuous process that supports life. Estimated values for pools in
the global water budget are expressed as cubic km, and the values for movements
(associated with arrows) are in cubic km per year. *The starred value (71,000 cubic km per
year) includes both transpiration from plants and evaporation from soil, streams, rivers,
and lakes.

Values are from Schlesinger, W. H.

Biogeochemistry: An Analysis of Global Change

, 2nd edition. Academic

Press, San Diego (1997) and based on several sources.

108 CHAPTER 5 How Ecosystems Work

or vapor—or its location, every molecule of water moves
through the hydrologic cycle repeatedly.
Some research suggests that air pollutants known
as aerosols (see Chapter 9) may weaken the global hy-
drologic cycle. Aerosols are believed to cause clouds to
form that release less precipitation, potentially affecting
the availability and quality of water in some regions. Cli-
mate change is also altering the global hydrologic cycle

How might the
components and quantities in the hydrologic
cycle change during drought conditions?

Think Critically
Free download pdf