Title | Sustainability of Regional Groundwater Quality in Response to Managed Aquifer Recharge |
Author | |
Corresponding Author | Fogg, Graham E.; Zheng, Chunmiao |
Publication Years | 2023-01
|
DOI | |
Source Title | |
ISSN | 0043-1397
|
EISSN | 1944-7973
|
Volume | 59Issue:1 |
Abstract | Growing demands on water supply worldwide have resulted in aquifer overdraft in many regions, especially in alluvial basins under intensive irrigation. This further leads to serious deterioration of groundwater quality. Managed aquifer recharge (MAR) has been shown to mitigate groundwater overdraft, but whether MAR can actually stabilize or reverse the ongoing declines in regional groundwater quality caused by non-point sources has not been demonstrated. This study was intended to address the question by investigating impacts of different MAR strategies on regional groundwater quality. A geostatistical model was first used to characterize a heterogeneous alluvial aquifer system in a portion of the Tulare Lake Basin. Three-dimensional numerical models were then employed to simulate groundwater flow and mass transport. Next, MAR strategies were applied in locations with different geological conditions or joint with different irrigation activities, and their performances were evaluated. Results demonstrate the potential of significant, long-term benefits for regional groundwater quality by applying strategic, high-intensity recharge operations on geologically favorable subregions. Siting MAR above the incised valley fill (IVF) deposit, a near-surface paleochannel containing unusually coarse, high-conductivity hydrofacies, leads to more extensive improvement in the groundwater quality in terms of salinity due to significant vertical flow and lateral outward flow from the IVF. Overall, decades would be required to alleviate groundwater quality concerns in the studied 189 km2 region. The simulations indicate that the deep concentrations remain below the secondary maximum contaminant level as the solute mass migrates downward with the prominent contribution from the attenuation via dispersion and matrix diffusion. © 2022. The Authors. |
Keywords | |
URL | [Source Record] |
Indexed By | |
Language | English
|
SUSTech Authorship | First
; Corresponding
|
Funding Project | This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42007162), National Key R&D program of China (2021YFC3200502), the U.S./China Clean Energy Research Center for Water‐Energy Technologies (CERC‐WET), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41861124003). We thank Stephen Maples and, Charlie Andrews for helping with preliminary review, also the editors and three reviewers for constructive suggestions.This research was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42007162), National Key R&D program of China (2021YFC3200502), the U.S./China Clean Energy Research Center for Water-Energy Technologies (CERC-WET), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (41861124003). We thank Stephen Maples and, Charlie Andrews for helping with preliminary review, also the editors and three reviewers for constructive suggestions.
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WOS Research Area | Environmental Sciences & Ecology
; Marine & Freshwater Biology
; Water Resources
|
WOS Subject | Environmental Sciences
; Limnology
; Water Resources
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WOS Accession No | WOS:001061072900001
|
Publisher | |
EI Accession Number | 20230513499931
|
EI Keywords | Aquifers
; Deterioration
; Groundwater flow
; Groundwater resources
; Irrigation
; Recharging (underground waters)
; Water quality
; Water supply
|
ESI Classification Code | Groundwater:444.2
; Water Analysis:445.2
; Water Supply Systems:446.1
; Fluid Flow, General:631.1
; Agricultural Methods:821.3
; Materials Science:951
|
ESI Research Field | ENVIRONMENT/ECOLOGY
|
Data Source | EV Compendex
|
Citation statistics |
Cited Times [WOS]:2
|
Document Type | Journal Article |
Identifier | http://kc.sustech.edu.cn/handle/2SGJ60CL/519668 |
Department | School of Environmental Science and Engineering |
Affiliation | 1.State Environmental Protection Key Laboratory of Integrated Surface Water-Groundwater Pollution Control, School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology, Shenzhen, China 2.Hydrologic Sciences, University of California, Davis; CA, United States |
First Author Affilication | School of Environmental Science and Engineering |
Corresponding Author Affilication | School of Environmental Science and Engineering |
First Author's First Affilication | School of Environmental Science and Engineering |
Recommended Citation GB/T 7714 |
Guo, Zhilin,Fogg, Graham E.,Chen, Kewei,et al. Sustainability of Regional Groundwater Quality in Response to Managed Aquifer Recharge[J]. WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,2023,59(1).
|
APA |
Guo, Zhilin,Fogg, Graham E.,Chen, Kewei,Pauloo, Rich,&Zheng, Chunmiao.(2023).Sustainability of Regional Groundwater Quality in Response to Managed Aquifer Recharge.WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH,59(1).
|
MLA |
Guo, Zhilin,et al."Sustainability of Regional Groundwater Quality in Response to Managed Aquifer Recharge".WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH 59.1(2023).
|
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