scholarly journals Streamflow depletion estimation for conjunctive water management in a heavily-stressed aquifer using analytical depletion functions

Author(s):  
Samuel Zipper ◽  
Tom Gleeson ◽  
Qiang Li ◽  
Ben Kerr
Author(s):  
Sara Soares ◽  
Daniela Terêncio ◽  
Luís Fernandes ◽  
João Machado ◽  
Fernando Pacheco

The drinking water supply to Vila Pouca de Aguiar municipality in North Portugal is based on high quality groundwater, namely on nearly one hundred artesian springs and fifty boreholes. The groundwater resources are plentiful on a municipal level, but evidence some deficits at the sub-municipal (village) level, especially during the dry period (July- August) that coincides with the return of many emigrants for holiday time. The deficits affect mostly the municipal capital (Vila Pouca de Aguiar) and a neighboring village (Pedras Salgadas), which populations nearly double or even triple during that period. The estimated annual deficits approach 55,000 m3/yr in those villages. If the anticipated increase in consumption/habitant and decrease in annual rainfall become reality in the next two decades, then the deficits may raise to approximately 90,000 m3/yr. To balance the water supply system, this study proposes its transition towards a conjunctive water management based on surface water stored in small dams and groundwater. A hydrologic modeling involving small forested catchments (< 15 km2) elected the Cabouço watershed as most suited basin to store stream water, because surface water availability is large (2.4 Mm3/yr) and forest cover is dominant (84.8%). Estimated nutrient loads are also compatible with drinking water supply.


Water Policy ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 5 (4) ◽  
pp. 331-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tanya Heikkila

This paper considers how water rights laws can shape the ways water providers coordinate when devising conjunctive water management programs. Conjunctive water management is a particularly useful tool for analyzing water management coordination because it involves certain physical and organizational complexities that may facilitate the need for coordination. It takes advantage of the natural storage capacity of underground aquifers for the storage of surface supplies during high flow seasons, allowing for recovery of those supplies when surface flows are limited. This paper compares conjunctive management programs across Arizona, California and Colorado. It identifies the distinct types of coordination associated with conjunctive water management programs across these states and shows that these forms of coordination depend upon the larger institutional setting governing rights to water resources.


1980 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-498 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jay E. Noel ◽  
B. Delworth Gardner ◽  
Charles V. Moore

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