A surface and ground‐water integrated investigation of streamflow drying up in semi‐arid regions

Author:

Wang Mingjun1,Xu Bo12ORCID,Li Yu1,Han Feng3,Du Xinqiang4,Zhang Jiayan1,Zhang Chi1,Peng Yong1

Affiliation:

1. School of Hydraulic Engineering Dalian University of Technology Dalian China

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering National University of Singapore Singapore Singapore

3. School of Environmental Science and Engineering Southern University of Science and Technology Shenzhen China

4. College of New Energy and Environment Jilin University Changchun China

Abstract

AbstractGroundwater exploitations in semi‐arid regions result in significant declines of groundwater levels and streamflow and even trigger seasonal streamflow drying up, which may bring adverse impacts on riparian ecosystems. It is critical to explore future streamflow changes caused by variable climate scenarios and groundwater exploitation intensities; however, a comprehensive assessment of the streamflow drying up frequency remains lacking. Furthermore, the thresholds of controlling factors beyond which streamflow drying up occurs have rarely been explored. Here we develop an integrated surface water‐groundwater model for the Taoer River Basin (TRB), a typical semi‐arid watershed in northeast China. We apply the model to multiple future scenarios to reveal the frequency of potential streamflow drying up and explore the thresholds of controlling factors of streamflow drying up based on a decision tree method. We find that the groundwater level in the lower region of the TRB (LTRB) is hard to recover to the riverbed elevation and the streamflow drying up frequency is still high unless the groundwater exploitation is reduced by 50%. However, this leads to a competition between the ecological and economic objectives. Our results also show that the streamflow drying up frequency in the LTRB is very sensitive to the upstream water inflow that can be regulated through the reservoir operation or inter‐basin water diversion, indicating the importance of a basin scale strategic management. The findings of this paper can help policy makers sustainably exploit water resources in semi‐arid regions.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Water Science and Technology

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