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States or in satisfaction of the <br />Mexican Treaty obligation." Nearly all <br />the water exported from the Upper <br />Colorado River system is measured; <br />however, the remaining beneficial <br />consumptive use, for the most part, <br />must be estimated using theoretical <br />methods and techniques. In the Lower <br />Colorado River system tributaries to <br />the mainstream, similar methods must be <br />employed to determine the amount of <br />water consumptively used. <br />Reservoir evaporation loss is a <br />consumptive use associated with the <br />beneficial use of water for other <br />purposes. For the purpose of this <br />report, main stem reservoir evaporation <br />is carried as a separate item for the <br />Upper and Lower Basins. <br />Channel losses within the system <br />are normally construed to be the <br />consumptive use by riparian vegetation <br />along the stream channel (or conveyance <br />route) and the ,evaporation from the <br />stream's water surface and wetted <br />materials. Seepage from the stream <br />normally appears again downstream or <br />reaches a ground water aquifer where it <br />may be usable again. A decided lack of <br />data and acceptable methodology along <br />with the intermittent flow characteris- <br />tics of many Southwest streams combine <br />to make a reasonable determination of <br />channel loss difficult. Channel losses <br />have not been estimated for this report <br />within the Upper Basin nor on the <br />tributaries of the Lower Colorado River <br />mainstream. Channel losses on the <br />mainstream below Lee Ferry have been <br />estimated primarily by the inflow- <br />outflow method. <br />11 <br />