期刊论文详细信息
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY 卷:593
Anthropogenic basin closure and groundwater salinization (ABCSAL)
Article
Pauloo, Richard A.1  Fogg, Graham E.1  Guo, Zhilin2  Harter, Thomas1 
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Hydrol Sci, One Shields Ave, Davis, CA 95616 USA
[2] South Univ Sci & Technol China, Environm Sci & Engn, 1088 Xueyuan Ave, Shenzhen Shi 518055, Guangdong Sheng, Peoples R China
关键词: Hydrogeology;    Basin closure;    Groundwater salinization;   
DOI  :  10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125787
来源: Elsevier
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【 摘 要 】

Global food systems rely on irrigated agriculture, and most of these systems in turn depend on fresh sources of groundwater. In this study, we demonstrate that groundwater development, even without overdraft, can transform a fresh, open basin into an evaporation dominated, closed-basin system, such that most of the groundwater, rather than exiting via stream baseflow and lateral subsurface flow, exits predominantly by evapotranspiration from irrigated lands. In these newly closed hydrologic basins, just as in other closed basins, groundwater salinization is inevitable because dissolved solids cannot escape, and the basin is effectively converted into a salt sink. We first provide a conceptual model of this process, called Anthropogenic Basin Closure and groundwater SALinization (ABCSAL). We examine the temporal dynamics of ABCSAL using the Tulare Lake Basin, California, as a case study for a large irrigated agricultural region with Mediterranean climate, overlying an unconsolidated sedimentary aquifer system. Even with modern water management practices that arrest historic overdraft, results indicate that shallow aquifers (36 m deep) exceed maximum contaminant levels for total dissolved solids on decadal timescales. Intermediate (132 m) and deep aquifers (187 m), essential for drinking water and irrigated crops, are impacted within two to three centuries. Hence, ABCSAL resulting from groundwater development constitutes a largely unrecognized constraint on groundwater sustainable yield on similar timescales to aquifer depletion in the Tulare Lake Basin, and poses a serious challenge to groundwater quality sustainability, even when water levels are stable. Results suggest that agriculturally intensive groundwater basins worldwide may be susceptible to ABCSAL.

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