Understanding the potential of climate teleconnections to project future groundwater drought
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Published:2019-08-08
Issue:8
Volume:23
Page:3233-3245
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Rust William, Holman Ian, Bloomfield JohnORCID, Cuthbert MarkORCID, Corstanje Ron
Abstract
Abstract. Predicting the next major drought is of paramount interest to water
managers globally. Estimating the onset of groundwater drought is of
particular importance, as groundwater resources are often assumed to be more
resilient when surface water resources begin to fail. A potential source of
long-term forecasting is offered by possible periodic controls on
groundwater level via teleconnections with oscillatory ocean–atmosphere
systems. However, relationships between large-scale climate systems and
regional to local-scale rainfall, evapotranspiration (ET) and groundwater are often complex and
non-linear so that the influence of long-term climate cycles on groundwater
drought remains poorly understood. Furthermore, it is currently unknown
whether the absolute contribution of multi-annual climate variability to
total groundwater storage is significant. This study assesses the extent to
which multi-annual variability in groundwater can be used to indicate the
timing of groundwater droughts in the UK. Continuous wavelet transforms show
how repeating teleconnection-driven 7-year and 16–32-year cycles in the
majority of groundwater sites from all the UK's major aquifers can
systematically control the recurrence of groundwater drought; and we provide
evidence that these periodic modes are driven by teleconnections. Wavelet
reconstructions demonstrate that multi-annual periodicities of the North
Atlantic Oscillation, known to drive North Atlantic meteorology, comprise up
to 40 % of the total groundwater storage variability. Furthermore, the
majority of UK recorded droughts in recent history coincide with a minimum
phase in the 7-year NAO-driven cycles in groundwater level, providing
insight into drought occurrences on a multi-annual timescale. Long-range
groundwater drought forecasts via climate teleconnections present
transformational opportunities to drought prediction and its management
across the North Atlantic region.
Funder
Natural Environment Research Council
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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