Effect of urbanisation on the water balance of a catchment with shallow groundwater

被引:107
|
作者
Barron, O. V. [1 ]
Barr, A. D. [1 ]
Donn, M. J. [1 ]
机构
[1] CSIRO Land & Water, CSIRO Water Healthy Country Natl Res Flagship, Wembley, WA 6913, Australia
关键词
Land use change; Urban; Surface and groundwater interaction; Groundwater use; Drainage; Western Australia; LAND-USE CHANGES; URBAN; IMPACTS; RUNOFF; SIMULATION; STREAMFLOW; RECHARGE; GEORGIA; MODEL; SCALE;
D O I
10.1016/j.jhydrol.2012.04.027
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
The impact of urbanisation on the water balance of a catchment dominated by surface water and groundwater interactions was investigated by using a process-based coupled surface water and groundwater model called MODHMS. The modelling estimated the likely changes in river discharge as a result of the land use change in the Southern River catchment in Western Australia. The catchment has both permeable soils and a shallow watertable. There was a significant increase in total annual discharge from the urbanised area where the runoff coefficient rose from 0.01 to more than 0.40. However in contrast with urban areas elsewhere these changes were mainly due to a shift in the subsurface water balance, including both groundwater and the unsaturated zone due to specifics of local hydrogeological conditions and adopted practice of storm runoff management. Due to the highly permeable soils, it is also common practice in the local building industry to direct runoff from roofs and roads into the soil and thereby the unconfined aquifer. Urbanisation results in particularly large changes in evapotranspiration from the soil profile and shallow watertable. The total subsurface evaporative flux reduced from 90% of infiltration (or 63-68% rainfall) to less than 29% (or 20% of rainfall) after urbanisation. Up to 83% (or 443 mm) of the pre-development evapotranspiration flux was from the shallow watertable. The requirement to control groundwater levels with drains in the shallow unconfined aquifer as well as the introduction of impervious surfaces caused a significant reduction of this component of evapotranspiration to less than 154 mm. These combined with an increase in infiltration rates, due to the direct infiltration of roof and road runoff, lead to higher groundwater recharge rates and subsequently groundwater discharge to the urban drainage network. The magnitude of urbanisation on catchment fluxes is most strongly influenced by urban density and the rate of local groundwater abstraction, which is used for urban irrigation. The analysis highlights that urban development in such areas reduces evaporation and evapotranspiration and therefore generates harvestable water. Depending on local needs this water could improve environmental flows and water for public and private water supply. Crown Copyright (C) 2012 Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:162 / 176
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Effect of shallow groundwater table on crop water requirements and crop yields
    Kahlown, MA
    Ashraf, M
    Zia-ul-Haq
    AGRICULTURAL WATER MANAGEMENT, 2005, 76 (01) : 24 - 35
  • [32] Temporal and spatial variation in shallow groundwater gradients in a boreal headwater catchment
    Erdbrugger, Jana
    van Meerveld, Ilja
    Seibert, Jan
    Bishop, Kevin
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2023, 626
  • [33] Statistical screening for descriptive parameters for pesticide occurrence in a shallow groundwater catchment
    Akesson, M.
    Sparrenbom, C. J.
    Carlsson, C.
    Kreuger, J.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2013, 477 : 165 - 174
  • [34] Shallow groundwater in a middle mountain catchment of Nepal: quantity and quality issues
    Dongol, BS
    Merz, J
    Schaffner, M
    Nakarmi, G
    Shah, PB
    Shrestha, SK
    Dangol, PM
    Dhakal, MP
    ENVIRONMENTAL GEOLOGY, 2005, 49 (02): : 219 - 229
  • [35] THE WATER-BALANCE OF AN AGRICULTURAL CATCHMENT .3. THE WATER-BALANCE
    MCGOWAN, M
    WILLIAMS, JB
    MONTEITH, JL
    JOURNAL OF SOIL SCIENCE, 1980, 31 (02): : 245 - 262
  • [36] Effects of urbanisation on the water balance - A long-term trajectory
    Haase, Dagmar
    ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT REVIEW, 2009, 29 (04) : 211 - 219
  • [37] Assessment and estimation of groundwater recharge for a catchment located in highland tropical climate in central Ethiopia using catchment soil–water balance (SWB) and chloride mass balance (CMB) techniques
    Molla Demlie
    Environmental Earth Sciences, 2015, 74 : 1137 - 1150
  • [38] Scale-Dependent Inter-Catchment Groundwater Flow in Forested Catchments: Analysis of Multi-Catchment Water Balance Observations in Japan
    Oda, Tomoki
    Iwasaki, Kenta
    Egusa, Tomohiro
    Kubota, Tayoko
    Iwagami, Sho
    Iida, Shin'ichi
    Momiyama, Hiroki
    Shimizu, Takanori
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2024, 60 (07)
  • [39] Interannual variability of catchment water balance in Australia
    Potter, Nicholas J.
    Zhang, Lu
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2009, 369 (1-2) : 120 - 129
  • [40] Water balance of several subarctic catchment areas
    Iofin, Zinovy
    SUSTAINABLE WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, 2020, 6 (03)