The relationship between land use and groundwater resources and quality

被引:180
作者
Lerner, David N. [1 ]
Harris, Bob [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sheffield, Catchment Sci Ctr, Kroto Res Inst, Sheffield S3 7HQ, S Yorkshire, England
关键词
Groundwater; Surface water; Ecosystem services; Vulnerability; Land use zoning; URBAN GROUNDWATER; NITRATE; UK; CONTAMINATION; TRANSPORT; POLLUTION; RECHARGE; ENGLAND; RIVER;
D O I
10.1016/j.landusepol.2009.09.005
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Groundwater has three major roles in our environment: providing the baseflow that keeps most rivers flowing all year long, maintaining good river water quality by diluting sewage and other effluents. and as an excellent Source of water supply, providing over 75 per cent of the potable supply in some regions. Groundwater is intimately connected with the landscape and land use that it underlies, and most of the landscape and is vulnerable to the anthropogenic activities on the land surface above. Land use affects groundwater resources through changes in recharge and by changing demands for water. Inappropriate land use, particularly poor land Management, causes chronic groundwater quality problems. Acute groundwater quality problems are common and arise from unsuitable land use and control, notably through point sources of hazardous chemicals. Current land use instruments have only been designed to address quality issues in groundwater and do not consider recharge. These instruments have been largely ineffective in protecting groundwater from diffuse pollution for several reasons including fragmentation, their general absence of teeth, and their lack of integration into the land use planning system. This paper argues for a more radical approach which would zone land according to its overall Vulnerability and resilience to anthropogenic and climatic influence in order to sustainably support the ecosystem services it can deliver. Land use would be matched with the vulnerability of the soil, with geology and water, and with the whole ecosystem. The Water Framework Directive offers a mechanism to do this, but there is no evidence of enough political will to tackle the long-term conflicts between land use and groundwater. (C) 2009 Queen's Printer and Controller of HMSO. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:S265 / S273
页数:9
相关论文
共 39 条
[31]   Sources and transport of selected organic micropollutants in urban groundwater underlying the city of Halle (Saale), Germany [J].
Osenbrueck, Karsten ;
Glaeser, Hans-Reinhard ;
Knoeller, Kay ;
Weise, Stephan M. ;
Moeder, Monika ;
Wennrich, Rainer ;
Schirmer, Mario ;
Reinstorf, Frido ;
Busch, Wolfgang ;
Strauch, Gerhard .
WATER RESEARCH, 2007, 41 (15) :3259-3270
[32]   Microbial contamination of two urban sandstone aquifers in the UK [J].
Powell, KL ;
Taylor, RG ;
Cronin, AA ;
Barrett, MH ;
Pedley, S ;
Sellwood, J ;
Trowsdale, SA ;
Lerner, DN .
WATER RESEARCH, 2003, 37 (02) :339-352
[33]   Dr John Snow and an early investigation of groundwater contamination [J].
Price, M .
200 YEARS OF BRITISH HYDROGEOLOGY, 2004, 225 :31-49
[34]   ORGANIC CONTAMINATION OF THE BIRMINGHAM AQUIFER, UK [J].
RIVETT, MO ;
LERNER, DN ;
LLOYD, JW ;
CLARK, L .
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 1990, 113 (1-4) :307-323
[35]   Global impacts of conversions from natural to agricultural ecosystems on water resources: Quantity versus quality [J].
Scanlon, Bridget R. ;
Jolly, Ian ;
Sophocleous, Marios ;
Zhang, Lu .
WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2007, 43 (03)
[36]   Effectiveness of the nitrate sensitive areas scheme in reducing groundwater concentrations in England [J].
Silgram, M ;
Williams, A ;
Waring, R ;
Neumann, I ;
Hughes, A ;
Mansour, M ;
Besien, T .
QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING GEOLOGY AND HYDROGEOLOGY, 2005, 38 :117-127
[37]  
UK Water Industry Research (UKWIR), 2004, 04WR098 UKWIR
[38]   Non-agricultural sources of groundwater nitrate: a review and case study [J].
Wakida, FT ;
Lerner, DN .
WATER RESEARCH, 2005, 39 (01) :3-16
[39]   Increasing streamflow and baseflow in Mississippi River since the 1940 s: Effect of land use change [J].
Zhang, Y. -K. ;
Schilling, K. E. .
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2006, 324 (1-4) :412-422