Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Water Cycle and Related Land Surface Processes Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
2. China National Environmental Monitoring Center Beijing China
3. Sino‐Danish College University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
Abstract
AbstractRainfall and sea tides significantly affect the coastal groundwater. The effect of rainfall events and sea tides on groundwater is not fully understood. In this study, groundwater level and electrical conductivity (EC) were simultaneously measured in three monitoring wells to evaluate the behaviour of freshwater in the uplifted atoll island of Zhaoshu, China. We used the water level sensor monitoring the position and variability of freshwater in the island. In the monitoring period, 86 rainfall events (cumulative rainfall above 1 mm) were identified. The fresh groundwater periodically fluctuates with phase lags every 1–2 h following sea tides. The intermittent rainfall increases the volume of fresh groundwater, while groundwater fluctuation is controlled by tides. Multiple regression analysis and cross‐correlation analysis were used to analyse the response relationship of groundwater to rainfall and tides. Variation in the groundwater level lags the EC as the temporal fluctuation of the sea tides. Only in case of severe rainstorm (cumulative precipitation of an event above 300 mm), the contribution of rainfall on groundwater level fluctuation is greater than that of sea tide. Four response modes (RRR, RFF, RFR, RRF) decomposition of groundwater have been defined according to the tidal stage and threshold (70.3–301.1 mm) of rainfall. The tidal‐induced groundwater effect (TGE) is stronger than the rainfall‐induced groundwater effect (RGE) but it is the opposite in the third and fourth modes. These results and mechanisms could be applied to other atoll islands, for our understanding of rainfall infiltration processes with tidal effect, and could be instrumental in estimating groundwater resources.
Funder
Chinese Academy of Sciences