Scientists are
hoping early research showing groundwater impacts will help
underground climate change surface as a full-fledged part of the
global system
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MADISON, WI, AUGUST 22, 2007- Climate change, a recent “hot topic” when
studying the atmosphere, oceans, and Earth’s surface; however, the study
of another important factor to this global phenomenon is still very much
“underground.” Few scientists are looking deep enough to see the possible
effects of climate change on groundwater systems. Little is known about
how soil, subsurface waters, and groundwater are responding to climate
change.
Scientists with CSIRO Australia and USDA’s Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) have addressed the vital need for the prediction of climate
change impacts on water below the ground. They report that the only way to
make such predictions is with simulated interactions between soils and
plants that are essential in determining sensitivities of
soil-water-vegetation systems to climate change. In their recent research,
they generated daily weather patterns that match historical records and
predicted climates with double the carbon dioxide using a General
Circulation Model (GCM) of the atmosphere. The daily weather that resulted
was entered into a soil-water-vegetation model that represented soil
absorbed water, water flow, and storage in soil, surface evaporation,
plant uptake, transpiration of water, and deep drainage below the roots of
trees and grasses that becomes groundwater recharge.
Results of this research are published in the August 2007 Vadose Zone
Journal in a special section titled, “Groundwater Resources Assessment
under the Pressures of Humanity and Climate Change.” The eight-articles in
this special section are available as open-access for a limited time. This
special section was edited by Timothy Green (USDA-ARS), Makoto Taniguchi
(Research Institute for Humanity and Nature, Japan), and Henk Kooi (Vrije
University, The Netherlands) includes studies of several locations around
the world, including regions of Africa, Asia, Australia, Micronesia, North
America, and Europe.
The simulation models showed that changes in the temperatures and
rainfall affected growth rates and leaf size of plants which impacts
groundwater recharge. In some areas, the vegetation response to climate
change would cause the average recharge to decrease, but in other areas,
recharge to groundwater would more than double.
According to the authors, the outcome of this research is vital to land
and water management agencies and policy makers all over the world. When
the likely scenario of the Earth’s atmosphere doubling its concentration
of carbon dioxide becomes a reality, this study indicates that groundwater
recharge may increase dramatically in some areas as the changes in
rainfall are amplified by the soil-water-plant systems that control
groundwater recharge. Regardless of whether such a response is viewed as a
benefit or liability, the potential magnitude of change presents strong
motivation to gain knowledge of these systems and improve our predictions
and responses.
In many countries, the groundwater reservoirs contribute a large part
of the total water supply. It is especially true for Denmark, where 99% of
the water supply depends on groundwater. This is why Scientists at the
University of Copenhagen and the Geological Survey of Denmark and
Greenland (GEUS) investigated the effects of future climate change on
groundwater recharge, storage, and discharge to streams for two
geologically and climatologically different regions in Denmark in a study
funded by the Danish Environmental Protection Agency. These results are
also published in the special section of Vadose Zone Journal.
The climate data used in this study was gathered from regional climate
simulations for two scenarios of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change for the period of 2071-2100. Average annual precipitation,
temperature, and loss of water in the soil increased, but clear seasonal
variations occurred. A model was used to simulate the altered water system
that resulted from changes in weather conditions. As most groundwater
systems react slowly to changes that occur on the earth’s surface, the
main focus of this study was the average monthly values for a 15-year
period.
The magnitude of the water response to the simulated climate change was
highly dependant on the geological setting. In the study area
characterized by sandy top soils and large, interconnected aquifers, the
groundwater levels rose significantly. For the other study, with
low-permeable top soils and thick clay layers, the groundwater levels only
showed minor changes. The primary effect in this area was the change in
river discharge with up to 50% increase in winter and 50% decrease in
summer. Research is ongoing at the University of Copenhagen and GEUS to
investigate other combined impacts of changes in climate, land use,
irrigation demand, and sea-level on water resources.
According to the guest editors, resource management and government
policies will need to be assessed based on both surface and underground
climate impacts altered by human activity. According to Timothy Green, one
of the guest editors, the simulations in these studies help to explain the
complex interactions between climate on plants and soils. For full
adaptation as part of the Earth’s water security discussions, he
recommends that underground climate change needs to surface as a
full-fledged part of the global system.
Vadose Zone Journal (VZJ),
http://vzj.scijournals.org/, is a peer-reviewed, international journal
of the vadose zone, the critical area between the soil surface and the
groundwater, published four times a year by the Soil Science Society of
America.
The American Society of Agronomy (ASA)
www.agronomy.org, the Crop Science
Society of America (CSSA) www.crops.org
and the Soil Science Society of America (SSSA)
www.soils.org are educational
organizations helping their 10,000+ members advance the disciplines and
practices of agronomy, crop and soil sciences by supporting professional
growth and science policy initiatives, and by providing quality,
research-based publications and a variety of member services.
For a copy of the manuscript or author contact info, please contact
Sara Uttech, suttech@soils.org,
608-268-4948
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