Impacts of urbanisation, climate change and management on groundwater recharge beneath Perth, Western Australia

被引:0
|
作者
McFarlane, Don [1 ]
Caccetta, Peter [2 ]
Cresswell, Richard [3 ]
Leonard, James [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Western Australia, Sch Agr & Environm, Perth, Australia
[2] CSIRO, Dept Math & Stat, Data 61, Bentley, Australia
[3] Eco Log Australia, Water Dept, Sydney, NSW, Australia
[4] Ecol Australia, Water Dept, Perth, Australia
来源
AUSTRALASIAN JOURNAL OF WATER RESOURCES | 2025年
关键词
Urban hydrology; climate change; managed aquifer recharge; WATER; INFILTRATION; WETLANDS; AQUIFER;
D O I
10.1080/13241583.2025.2486214
中图分类号
TV21 [水资源调查与水利规划];
学科分类号
081501 ;
摘要
Urbanisation has profound effects on environmental water fluxes and storages, which can be further compounded by climate change and management responses. This study shows how climate change influences the type and amount of recharge in urban areas with different housing densities under Perth, Western Australia. We demonstrate that consequent water conservation measures aimed to reduce irrigation may be having unintended negative consequences by increasing urban heating. Groundwater recharge was measured under Perth, Western Australia, in 1980-81 and again in 2017-18, a 38-year climate period which saw annual rainfall fall by 150 mm; months with heavy rain reduce by half; maximum annual temperatures increase by more than 1 degrees C and potential evaporation increase by 15%. The consequent reduction in direct recharge through soils due to climate change was enhanced by regulated reductions in sprinkler irrigation, whilst interception losses via tree canopies increased as rain fell as lighter showers rather than prolonged events. Indirect recharge off roofs and roads, however, was less affected and now dominates recharge to the shallow, unconfined aquifer. The primary management response to falling groundwater levels has been to reduce extraction from the aquifer. We propose an additional viable strategy would be managed aquifer recharge, using either water from main drains that remove groundwater, or secondary-treated wastewater, which is currently pumped to the ocean. Increasing, or at least maintaining, local irrigation could provide multiple positive benefits, including evaporative cooling over large urban areas to help reverse urban heating. Increased urbanisation worldwide generally increases urban runoff and generates urban heat islands. In cities, such as Perth, built over transmissive sand aquifers, however, increasing local recharge can provide valuable non-potable water and help urban cooling. Identifying and installing additional recharge systems, however, is difficult for managers as it requires innovation and additional resourcing compared with purely restricting licensed extraction.
引用
收藏
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Impacts of recent climate change on wheat production systems in Western Australia
    Ludwig, Fulco
    Milroy, Stephen P.
    Asseng, Senthold
    CLIMATIC CHANGE, 2009, 92 (3-4) : 495 - 517
  • [32] The influence of model structure on groundwater recharge rates in climate-change impact studies
    Moeck, Christian
    Brunner, Philip
    Hunkeler, Daniel
    HYDROGEOLOGY JOURNAL, 2016, 24 (05) : 1171 - 1184
  • [33] Climate Change Impacts on Groundwater Active Recharge in Coastal Plain of Dar es Salaam (Tanzania)
    Sappa, Giuseppe
    Trotta, Antonio
    Vitale, Stefania
    ENGINEERING GEOLOGY FOR SOCIETY AND TERRITORY, VOL 1: CLIMATE CHANGE AND ENGINEERING GEOLOGY, 2015, : 177 - 180
  • [34] Potential impacts of climate change on groundwater recharge and streamflow in a central European low mountain range
    Eckhardt, K
    Ulbrich, U
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2003, 284 (1-4) : 244 - 252
  • [35] Projected risks to groundwater-dependent terrestrial vegetation caused by changing climate and groundwater abstraction in the Central Perth Basin, Western Australia
    Barron, Olga
    Froend, Ray
    Hodgson, Geoff
    Ali, Riasat
    Dawes, Warrick
    Davies, Phil
    McFarlane, Don
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2014, 28 (22) : 5513 - 5529
  • [36] Impact of climate change on groundwater recharge in dry areas: An ecohydrology approach
    Liu, Hui-Hai
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2011, 407 (1-4) : 175 - 183
  • [37] Hospital healthcare costs attributable to heat and future estimations in the context of climate change in Perth, Western Australia
    Tong, Michael Xiaoliang
    Wondmagegn, Berhanu Yazew
    Williams, Susan
    Hansen, Alana
    Dear, Keith
    Pisaniello, Dino
    Xiang, Jianjun
    Xiao, Jianguo
    Jian, Le
    Scalley, Ben
    Nitschke, Monika
    Nairn, John
    Bambrick, Hilary
    Karnon, Jonathan
    Bi, Peng
    ADVANCES IN CLIMATE CHANGE RESEARCH, 2021, 12 (05) : 638 - 648
  • [38] Island groundwater resources, impacts of abstraction and a drying climate: Rottnest Island, Western Australia
    Bryan, Eliza
    Meredith, Karina T.
    Baker, Andy
    Post, Vincent E. A.
    Andersen, Martin S.
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2016, 542 : 704 - 718
  • [39] USE OF ARTIFICIAL GROUNDWATER RECHARGE METHODS FOR THE WATER RESOURCE MANAGEMENT IN THE CONTEXT OF CLIMATE CHANGE
    Ciugulea, Oana
    Bica, Ioan
    SCIENTIFIC PAPERS-SERIES E-LAND RECLAMATION EARTH OBSERVATION & SURVEYING ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING, 2016, 5 : 93 - 98
  • [40] Impacts of Decreasing Recharge Rates on Sustainable Groundwater Management
    Yazicigil, Hasan
    Yilmaz, Koray K.
    Erdemli, Burcu Unsal
    Yagbasan, Ozlem
    CLIMATE CHANGE AND ITS EFFECTS ON WATER RESOURCES: ISSUES OF NATIONAL AND GLOBAL SECURITY, 2011, : 43 - +