| Literature DB >> 32269399 |
Yoshihide Wada1,2,3,4, John T Reager5, Benjamin F Chao6, Jida Wang7, Min-Hui Lo8, Chunqiao Song9, Yuwen Li6, Alex S Gardner5.
Abstract
Sea level rise is generally attributed to increased ocean heat content and increased rates glacier and ice melt. However, human transformations of Earth's surface have impacted water exchange between land, atmosphere, and ocean, ultimately affecting global sea level variations. Impoundment of water in reservoirs and artificial lakes has reduced the outflow of water to the sea, while river runoff has increased due to groundwater mining, wetland and endorheic lake storage losses, and deforestation. In addition, climate-driven changes in land water stores can have a large impact on global sea level variations over decadal timescales. Here, we review each component of negative and positive land water contribution separately in order to highlight and understand recent changes in land water contribution to sea level variations.Entities:
Keywords: Climate variability; Groundwater depletion (GWD); Land water storage; Reservoir impoundment; Sea level rise (SLR)
Year: 2016 PMID: 32269399 PMCID: PMC7115037 DOI: 10.1007/s10712-016-9399-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Surv Geophys ISSN: 0169-3298 Impact factor: 6.673
Global and regional estimates of groundwater depletion (GWD) contribution to sea level rise (SLR)
| GWD (km3 year−1) | SLR (mm year−1) | Year | Notes | Sources | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Global | Sahagian et al. ( | 86.7 | 0.24 | Contemporary | Limited regions (e.g., USA, India, China) | Literature Country statistics |
| Postel ( | 200 | 0.56 | Contemporary | Global | Literature Country statistics | |
| Gornitz ( | 36–108 | 0.1–0.3 | Contemporary | Limited regions (e.g., USA, India, China) | Literature Country statistics | |
| Foster and Loucks ( | 26.8 | 0.075 | Contemporary | Limited regions (e.g., Middle East, Northern Africa) | Literature Country statistics | |
| Wada et al. ( | 126 (±32) 283 (±40) | 0.35 (±0.09) 0.79 (±0.11) | 1960 2000 | Depletion equals abstraction in excess of recharge | IGRAC-GGIS PCR-GLOBWB (0.5°) | |
| Konikow ( | 145 (±39) | 0.4 (±0.11) | 2000–2008 | Extrapolated for other than USA, north India, North China Plain, Saudi Arabia, Nubian and Sahara | In situ groundwater level measurements, GRACE satellite observation, calibrated groundwater model, extrapolation (15.4 %; depletion to abstraction ratio of USA) | |
| Wada et al. | 163 (±28) 204 (±30) | 0.45 (±0.07) 0.57 (±0.08) | 1990–2000 2000 | Corrected against reported regional depletion estimates | IGRAC-GGIS PCR-GLOBWB (0.5°) | |
| Pokhrel et al. ( | 455 (±42) | 1.27 (±0.12) | 2000 | Depletion equals water demand in excess of water availability | MATSIRO (1.0°) | |
| Döll et al. ( | 113 | 0.31 | 2000–2009 | Application of deficit irrigation | WaterGAP (0.5o), In situ groundwater level measurements, GRACE satellite observation | |
| Van Dijk et al. ( | 92 | 0.26 | 2003–2012 | Without data assimilation, original depletion equals 168 km3 year−1 | Data assimilation with GRACE satellite observation | |
| Famiglietti ( | 77.4 | 0.22 | 2003–2013 | Time periods vary among studies considered Limited regions | Various studies using GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| Pokhrel et al. ( | 330 | 0.92 | 2000 | 570 km3 year−1 for the global groundwater abstraction for 2000 | MATSIRO (1.0°) | |
| Wada et al. ( | 7.2 (±1.4) 97 (±14) | 0.02 (±0.004) 0.27 (±0.04) | 1900 2000 | Coupled atmosphere-land–ocean model simulation | NCAR CESM-CAM4-CLM4 (1.0°) | |
Regional Northwest Sahara | Richey et al. ( | 2.7 | 0.008 | 2003–2012 | Algeria, Libya, Tunisia | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| Middle East and North Africa (MENA) | Foster and Loucks ( | 26.8 | 0.0075 | Contemporary | Literature Country statistics | |
| Voss et al. ( | 13.0 (±1.6) | 0.036 (±0.005) | 2003–2009 | Cumulative 91.3 (± 10.9) km3 for 2003–2009 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| Arabian | Richey et al. ( | 15.5 | 0.04 | 2003–2013 | Iraq, Jordan, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Yemen | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| Guarani | Richey et al. ( | 1.0 | 0.003 | 2003–2013 | Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| North China Plain (NCP) | Cao et al. ( | 4.0 2.5 4.0 2.0 7.0 4.0 | 0.01 0.007 0.01 0.006 0.02 0.01 | 1960–2008 1970s 1980s 1990–1996 1997–2001 2002–2008 | Cumulatively 158 km3 for 1960–2008 (20% of pumpage of 807 km3) | MODFLOW |
| Feng et al. ( | 8.3 (±1.1) | 0.02 (±0.03) | 2003–2010 | 2.5 km3 year−1 for shallow aquifers reported by Groundwater Bulletin of China Northern Plains | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| Huang et al. ( | 2.5 (±0.4)-PP 1.5 (±0.2)-ECP | 0.007 (±0.001) 0.004 (±0.0005) | 2003–2012 | Piedmont Plain (PP) East Central Plain (ECP) | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| Indus | Cheema et al. ( | 31 | 0.09 | 2007 | 68 km3 of total groundwater abstraction | Remote sensing combined with a hydrological model and spatial information on canal water supplies |
| Northern India | Rodell et al. ( | 17.7 (±4.5) | 0.05 (±0.01) | 2002–2008 | Cumulative 109 km3 for 2002–2008 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| Northern India and surrounding regions | Tiwari et al. ( | 54 (±9) | 0.15 (±0.03) | 2002–2008 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| Jacob et al. ( | 35 | 0.1 | 2003–2010 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | ||
| Bangladesh | Shamsudduha et al. ( | 0.44(±1.24)–2.04(± 0.79)- wet seasons 0.52(± 0.5)–2.83(± 0.42)-annual | 0.001(± 0.004)–0.006(± 0.002) 0.002(± 0.001)–0.008(± 0.001) | 2003–2007 | Depletion of 0.52 (± 0.30)–0.85 (± 0.17) km3 year−1 from borehole hydrographs | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| California’s Central Valley | Famiglietti et al. ( | 3.1 (± 0.6) | 0.009 (± 0.002) | 2003–2010 | Cumulative 20.3 km3 for 2003–2010 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
| Scanlon et al. ( | 2.0 6–8 | 0.006 0.017–0.022 | 1962–2003 2006–2010 | Cumulative 24.6 km3 for 1976–1977, 49.3 km3 for 1987–1992, 140 km3 since the 1860s, and 80 km3 since the 1960s | MODFLOW | |
| Scanlon et al. ( | 8.9 (± 0.9) | 0.025 (± 0.0025) | 2006–2010 | Cumulative 31.0 (± 3.0) km3 for 2006–2010 | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes | |
| High Plains Aquifer | Scanlon et al. ( | 5.7 7.0 12.5 | 0.016 0.02 0.035 | 1950–2007 1987–2007 2003–2013 | Cumulative 330 km3 after pre-development in the 1950s | MODFLOW |
| Canning Basin | Richey et al. ( | 3.6 | 0.01 | 2003–2013 | Australia | GRACE-derived total terrestrial water storage changes |
Fig. 1Time series of the estimated annual contribution of terrestrial water storage change to global sea level over the period 1900–2014 (rates in mm year−1) (modified from Wada et al. 2016)
Fig. 2Cumulative amount of water impoundment in artificial reservoirs as a function of time during the last century, with the equivalent sea level drop on the right-hand scale. The blue dashed curve is the nominal capacity, and the red curve is the “actual” impoundment (see text). Also shown is the continental breakdown. The inset is the per-year water impoundment
Large reservoirs that are excluded from this additional water seepage due to that they are not “new” reservoirs but rather dam-raised lake levels of existing lakes, including the Owen Falls/Lake Victoria (the largest in the list) and several large water projects
| Country | Reservoir name |
|---|---|
| Canada | Manicouagan |
| Jenpeg | |
| Smallwood Reservoir | |
| Missi Falls Control | |
| Ear Falls Dam | |
| Whitesand Rapids | |
| Pipmuacan | |
| Keenleyside | |
| China | Sanhezha |
| Finland | TainionkoskI |
| Russia | Irkutsk |
| Verkhne-Tulomskaya | |
| Onda | |
| Kumskaya | |
| Verkhne-Svirskaya | |
| USA | Structure 308 |
Global land water storage budget (2002–2014) in mm year−1
| 2002–2014 (mm year−1) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Observed SLR | Church et al. ( | 3.2 (±0.4) |
| Cazenave et al. ( | 2.4 | |
| Estimated Land water storage | ||
| Groundwater | Wada et al. ( | 0.30 (±0.1) |
| Reservoir impoundment | This study | −0.24 (±0.02) |
| Deforestation (after 2010) | This study | 0.035 |
| Wetland loss (after 1990) | This study | 0.075 |
| Endorheic basin storage loss | ||
| Caspian | This study | 0.109 (±0.004) |
| Aral Sea | This study | 0.036(±0.0003) |
| Climate-driven land water storage | Reager et al. ( | −0.71 (±0.2) |
| Net land water storage | This study | −0.40 (±0.2) |
| IPCC AR5 (1993–2010) | 0.38 (±0.12) | |
Fig. 3Global mass budget estimate from Reager et al. (2016). This includes a disaggregation of the land water storage estimate into land glaciers, human-driven, and climate-driven water storage