HYDROGEOMORPHIC CLASSIFICATION (HGM) (BRINSON)

 

I. CLASSIFICATION SYSTEM

          A. Emphasizes: hydrology, geomorphology

          B. Independent of: biogeographic distribution of species

(Uses information external to wetland.)

          C. Supposed to aggregate wetlands with similar functions

 

II. COMPONENTS

          A. Geomorphic setting (topographic location)

          B. Water source and its transport (precipitation, surface, groundwater)

          C. Hydrodynamics (direction and strength of flow)

 

III. GEOMORPHIC SETTING

          A. Depressional wetlands

          B. Peatlands

          C. Riverine

          D. Fringe

          E. Slope

          F. Flats

                  

 

IV. WATER SOURCE

          A. Biotically important water factors

          B. Hydrologic inputs: precipitation, groundwater, surface or near-surface flows

          C. Resultant wetlands

                   groundwater = groundwater slope or depressional wetlands

                   stream channel = fringe or riverine

                   low surface flows and low groundwater flows = bog, fen

 

V. HYDRODYNAMICS

          A. Definition: motion of water and capacity to do work

          B. Vertical flux (depressional, evapotranspiration, rain)

          C. Unidirectional (riverine, streamflow)

          D. Bidirectional, surface or near surface (fringe wetlands, tides, wind, storage)