Impact of water withdrawals from groundwater and surface water on continental water storage variations

被引:491
作者
Doell, P. [1 ]
Hoffmann-Dobrev, H. [1 ]
Portmann, F. T. [1 ]
Siebert, S. [2 ]
Eicker, A. [3 ]
Rodell, M. [4 ]
Strassberg, G. [5 ]
Scanlon, B. R. [5 ]
机构
[1] Goethe Univ Frankfurt, Inst Phys Geog, D-60438 Frankfurt, Germany
[2] Univ Bonn, Inst Crop Sci & Resource Conservat, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
[3] Univ Bonn, Inst Geodesy & Geoinformat, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
[4] NASA, Hydrol Sci Branch, Goddard Space Flight Ctr, Greenbelt, MD 20771 USA
[5] Univ Texas Austin, Bur Econ Geol, Jackson Sch Geosci, Austin, TX 78758 USA
关键词
Water withdrawals; Groundwater; Surface water; Global hydrological model; Water storage; High Plains aquifer; Mississippi basin; GLOBAL HYDROLOGICAL MODEL; VALIDATION; DATABASE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jog.2011.05.001
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Humans have strongly impacted the global water cycle, not only water flows but also water storage. We have performed a first global-scale analysis of the impact of water withdrawals on water storage variations, using the global water resources and use model WaterGAP. This required estimation of fractions of total water withdrawals from groundwater, considering five water use sectors. According to our assessment, the source of 35% of the water withdrawn worldwide (4300 km(3)/year during 1998-2002) is groundwater. Groundwater contributes 42%, 36% and 27% of water used for irrigation, households and manufacturing, respectively, while we assume that only surface water is used for livestock and for cooling of thermal power plants. Consumptive water use was 1400 km(3)/year during 1998-2002. It is the sum of the net abstraction of 250 km(3)/year of groundwater (taking into account evapotranspiration and return flows of withdrawn surface water and groundwater) and the net abstraction of 1150 km(3)/year of surface water. Computed net abstractions indicate, for the first time at the global scale, where and when human water withdrawals decrease or increase groundwater or surface water storage. In regions with extensive surface water irrigation, such as Southern China, net abstractions from groundwater are negative, i.e. groundwater is recharged by irrigation. The opposite is true for areas dominated by groundwater irrigation, such as in the High Plains aquifer of the central USA, where net abstraction of surface water is negative because return flow of withdrawn groundwater recharges the surface water compartments. In intensively irrigated areas, the amplitude of seasonal total water storage variations is generally increased due to human water use; however, in some areas, it is decreased. For the High Plains aquifer and the whole Mississippi basin, modeled groundwater and total water storage variations were compared with estimates of groundwater storage variations based on groundwater table observations, and with estimates of total water storage variations from the GRACE satellites mission. Due to the difficulty in estimating area-averaged seasonal groundwater storage variations from point observations of groundwater levels, it is uncertain whether WaterGAP underestimates actual variations or not. We conclude that WaterGAP possibly overestimates water withdrawals in the High Plains aquifer where impact of human water use on water storage is readily discernible based on WaterGAP calculations and groundwater observations. No final conclusion can be drawn regarding the possibility of monitoring water withdrawals in the High Plains aquifer using GRACE. For the less intensively irrigated Mississippi basin, observed and modeled seasonal groundwater storage reveals a discernible impact of water withdrawals in the basin, but this is not the case for total water storage such that water withdrawals at the scale of the whole Mississippi basin cannot be monitored by GRACE. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:143 / 156
页数:14
相关论文
共 45 条
[1]   Development and testing of the WaterGAP 2 global model of water use and availability [J].
Alcamo, J ;
Döll, P ;
Henrichs, T ;
Kaspar, F ;
Lehner, B ;
Rösch, T ;
Siebert, S .
HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES JOURNAL-JOURNAL DES SCIENCES HYDROLOGIQUES, 2003, 48 (03) :317-337
[2]   Global Evaluation of the ISBA-TRIP Continental Hydrological System. Part I: Comparison to GRACE Terrestrial Water Storage Estimates and In Situ River Discharges [J].
Alkama, R. ;
Decharme, B. ;
Douville, H. ;
Becker, M. ;
Cazenave, A. ;
Sheffield, J. ;
Voldoire, A. ;
Tyteca, S. ;
Le Moigne, P. .
JOURNAL OF HYDROMETEOROLOGY, 2010, 11 (03) :583-600
[3]  
[Anonymous], 17 WATCH
[4]  
Bettadpur S., 2007, CSR PUBL
[5]   Global-scale modeling of groundwater recharge [J].
Doell, P. ;
Fiedler, K. .
HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2008, 12 (03) :863-885
[6]  
Döll P, 2009, HYDROL EARTH SYST SC, V13, P2413
[7]   Vulnerability to the impact of climate change on renewable groundwater resources: a global-scale assessment [J].
Doell, Petra .
ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2009, 4 (03)
[8]   Global modeling of irrigation water requirements -: art. no. 1037 [J].
Döll, P ;
Siebert, S .
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2002, 38 (04) :8-1
[9]   A global hydrological model for deriving water availability indicators:: model tuning and validation [J].
Döll, P ;
Kaspar, F ;
Lehner, B .
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2003, 270 (1-2) :105-134
[10]   Challenges in Deriving Trends from GRACE [J].
Eicker, A. ;
Mayer-Guerr, T. ;
Kurtenbach, E. .
GEODESY FOR PLANET EARTH: PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2009 IAG SYMPOSIUM, 2012, 136 :153-160