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Modes of interaction and varying feedback between groundwater and climate depending on soil characteristics
Publikationstyp
Conference Paper
Date Issued
2023-05-15
Sprache
English
Institute
Citation
EGU General Assembly (2023)
Contribution to Conference
Publisher DOI
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Climate, climate variability, and climate change could influence groundwater. Shifts in precipitation patterns, recharge, or snowmelt are among the several climate-related variables with important impacts on groundwater. However, the climate-groundwater relationship is not one-way. Groundwater can also impact the climate itself via its influence on different processes and variables such as evaporation, soil moisture, and vegetation. Understanding the interactions and the feedback relationship between groundwater and climate is crucial for sustainable water resource management and resilient adaptation to climate change. Current understanding of how climate influences groundwater and the resulting feedback from groundwater and its impacts on climate is limited. This is of particular importance in the face of projected climatic changes. Here, we aim to develop a simple analytical framework to extend the projection capabilities required to characterize the climate-groundwater interactions depending on the soil characteristics serving as an intermediate domain between the groundwater and climate systems. Our proposed analytical framework can be used to identify potential regions with significant two-way (bidirectional) interactions between climate and groundwater using soil characteristics and soil water retention curves following the theoretical lines discussed in Shokri and Salvucci (2011) and Or and Lehmann (2019). Using this framework, we identify regions of expected hydraulic connections between groundwater and soil surface, depending on the competition between capillary forces and the limiting gravity and viscous forces, and the groundwater depth (GWD) in the city of Hamburg. We argue that in regions with bidirectional interactions, groundwater is potentially more vulnerable to climate change and variability. Moreover, our initial results suggest that regions with finer textured soils are more sensitive to changes in evaporation and air temperature in terms of hydraulic connections between groundwater and the soil surface, which can influence the groundwater-climate interactions. Our analysis provides the basis for further investigation of the feedback impacts of groundwater on several variables, such as soil moisture, ground cooling capacity, and vegetation patterns under different climate change scenarios. ReferencesOr, D., & Lehmann, P. (2019). Surface evaporative capacitance: How soil typeand rainfall characteristics affect global-scale surface evaporation. Water Resources Research, 55, 519-539.https://doi.org/10.1029/2018WR024050.Shokri, N., Salvucci, G. (2011). Evaporation from porous media in the presence of a water table. Vadose Zone J., 10, 1309-1318.
Subjects
groundwater
climate
DDC Class
550: Earth Sciences, Geology
624: Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering