Urbanisation and Shallow Groundwater: Predicting Changes in Catchment Hydrological Responses

被引:0
|
作者
O. V. Barron
M. J. Donn
A. D. Barr
机构
[1] CSIRO Water for a Healthy Country National Research Flagship,
[2] CSIRO Land and Water,undefined
来源
关键词
Land use change; Urban; Surface and groundwater interaction; Groundwater use; Drainage; Western Australia;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The impact of urbanisation on catchment hydrological response was investigated by using a process-based coupled surface water–groundwater model (MODHMS). The modelling estimated likely changes in river discharge as a result of land-use change in the Southern River catchment in Western Australia, underlined by a highly transmissive aquifer, has permeable soils and a shallow watertable. A significant increase in total annual discharge was predicted as a result of urbanisation area with the runoff coefficient rising from 0.01 to more than 0.40. In contrast with urban areas elsewhere, these changes were mainly due to a shift in the subsurface water balance, leading to significant reduction in evaporative losses from the soil profile and shallow watertable after urbanisation (from nearly 80 % of infiltration to less than 20 %). The infiltration of roof and road runoff and establishment of subsurface drainage adopted in local construction practice leads to higher groundwater recharge rates and subsequently groundwater discharge to the urban drainage network. Urban density and groundwater abstraction for urban irrigation most strongly influence the urbanisation impact on catchment fluxes. The results shows that urban development leads to a production of ‘harvestable’ water; and depending on local needs, this water could be used for public and private water supply or to improve environmental flows.
引用
收藏
页码:95 / 115
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Urbanisation and Shallow Groundwater: Predicting Changes in Catchment Hydrological Responses
    Barron, O. V.
    Donn, M. J.
    Barr, A. D.
    [J]. WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT, 2013, 27 (01) : 95 - 115
  • [2] Effect of urbanisation on the water balance of a catchment with shallow groundwater
    Barron, O. V.
    Barr, A. D.
    Donn, M. J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2013, 485 : 162 - 176
  • [3] PLANKTON RESPONSES TO HYDROLOGICAL CHANGES INDUCED BY FRESHETS IN A SHALLOW MESOTIDAL ESTUARY
    DEMADARIAGA, I
    GONZALEZAZPIRI, L
    VILLATE, F
    ORIVE, E
    [J]. ESTUARINE COASTAL AND SHELF SCIENCE, 1992, 35 (04) : 425 - 434
  • [4] Hydrogeochemistry of shallow groundwater in an upland Scottish catchment
    Soulsby, C
    Chen, M
    Ferrier, RC
    Helliwell, RC
    Jenkins, A
    Harriman, R
    [J]. HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 1998, 12 (07) : 1111 - 1127
  • [5] Changes in the quality of shallow groundwater in agriculturally used catchment in the Wisnickie Foothills (Southern Poland)
    Bojarczuk, Anna
    Jelonkiewicz, Ewelina
    Jelonkiewicz, Lukasz
    Lenart-Boron, Anna
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION, 2019, 45 (01) : 19 - 25
  • [6] Catchment hydrological sensitivities to climate changes
    Panagoulia, DG
    [J]. DIACHRONIC CLIMATIC IMPACTS ON WATER RESOURCES, 1996, 36 : 251 - 281
  • [7] Impact of Groundwater Abstraction on Hydrological Responses during Extreme Drought Periods in the Boryeong Dam Catchment, Korea
    Park, Sanghyun
    Kim, Hyeonjun
    Jang, Choelhee
    [J]. WATER, 2021, 13 (15)
  • [8] Exploring the hydrological impact of increasing urbanisation on a tropical river catchment of the metropolitan Jakarta, Indonesia
    Remondi, Federica
    Burlando, Paolo
    Vollmer, Derek
    [J]. SUSTAINABLE CITIES AND SOCIETY, 2016, 20 : 210 - 221
  • [9] Predicting channel type from catchment and hydrological variables
    Young, William J.
    Ogden, Ralph W.
    Hughes, Andrew O.
    Prosser, Ian P.
    [J]. IAHS-AISH Publication, 2002, (276): : 53 - 60
  • [10] Predicting channel type from catchment and hydrological variables
    Young, WJ
    Ogden, RW
    Hughes, AO
    Prosser, IP
    [J]. STRUCTURE, FUNCTION AND MANAGEMENT IMPLICATIONS OF FLUVIAL SEDIMENTARY SYSTEMS, 2002, (276): : 53 - 60