| Literature DB >> 28821727 |
Kurt C Solander1, John T Reager2, Yoshihide Wada3,4,5, James S Famiglietti2, Richard S Middleton6.
Abstract
Changes in the climate and population growth will critically impact the future supply and demand of water, leading to large uncertainties for sustainable resource management. In the absence of on-the-ground measurements to provide spatially continuous, high-resolution information on water supplies, satellite observations can provide essential insight. Here, we develop a technique using observations from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellite to evaluate the sustainability of surface water and groundwater use over the continental United States. We determine the annual total water availability for 2003-2015 using the annual variability in GRACE-derived total water storage for 18 major watersheds. The long-term sustainable water quantity available to humans is calculated by subtracting an annual estimate of the water needed to maintain local ecosystems, and the resulting water volumes are compared to reported consumptive water use to determine a sustainability fraction. We find over-consumption is highest in the southwest US, where increasing stress trends were observed in all five basins and annual consumptive use exceeded 100% availability twice in the Lower Colorado basin during 2003-2015. By providing a coarse-scale evaluation of sustainable water use from satellite and ground observations, the established framework serves as a blueprint for future large-scale water resource monitoring.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28821727 PMCID: PMC5562833 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-07450-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Map of 18 HUC 2-digit basins covering the contiguous US (Created using ArcGIS 10.4: http://desktop.arcgis.com/en/arcmap/10.4/get-started/main/get-started-with-arcmap.htm)[26].
Figure 2Conceptual diagram demonstrating how to calculate annual TWA. The black line represents the difference in monthly GRACE TWS and NLDAS soil moisture anomalies. The annual TWA is estimated as the cumulative decrease in month-to-month TWS and soil moisture differences (grey bars). The human TWA represents the portion of the total water available to humans after accounting for environmental demands using the environmental coefficient value, which is set to 0.5 in this example.
Figure 3Annual 2003–2015 percent consumptive water use to availability ratios for the 18 two-digit HUC regions of the continental United States. Values shown represent results obtained when median environmental coefficient and irrigation efficiency parameters were used (created using Matlab version 2015b: https://www.mathworks.com/products/new_products/release2015b.html).
Figure 42003–2015 time series of percent consumptive water use to availability ratios for the southwest two-digit HUC regions. Solid black line represents results obtained when median environmental coefficient of 0.5 and water efficiency ratio of 0.6 were used. Associated linear trends (dashed black line) in water use to availability fractions are as follows: (−0.42% yr−1, p-value = 0.67), 14 Upper Colorado (0.44% yr−1, p-value = 0.51), 15 Lower Colorado (1.33% yr−1, p-value = 0.55), 16 Great Basin (0.47% yr−1, p-value = 0.48), 17 Pacific Northwest (0.34% yr−1, p-value = 0.41), and 18 California (1.10% yr−1, p-value = 0.39). Shaded regions indicate possible estimates given full range of parameter values.