Publication
Quantifying Groundwater's Contribution to Regional Environmental‐Flows in Diverse Hydrologic Landscapes
Publisher:
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Date:
06-2023
DOI:
10.1029/2022WR033153
Abstract: Increasing recognition of the importance of ecosystem services in water resources management has accelerated the development and application of environmental‐flows requirements for lotic ecosystems. However, most environmental‐flows management focuses on water infrastructure, such as dams or ersions, without explicitly taking groundwater into account and ignoring the importance of groundwater environmental flow contribution. In this study two methods for estimating groundwater environmental flow contributions are presented: (a) a groundwater‐centric method (based on the Sustainability Boundary Approach), which proposes that high levels of ecological protection are maintained if 90% of groundwater discharge is preserved, and (b) a surface water‐centric method (novel method), which quantifies groundwater environmental flow contributions from streamflow using region‐specific streamflow sensitivity metrics and local environmental‐flows policies. The two methods were tested in British Columbia, Canada, which has a erse, complex, and highly coupled groundwater‐surface water system. The two methods gave comparable results in various hydro‐geoclimatic settings. Although British Columbia was used as a case study, this framework can be implemented across various spatial and temporal scales for different regions and globally, in data‐scarce, hydrologically complex landscapes. Application of these methods can aid in a robust and holistic assessment of environmental‐flows, taking into account the often‐missing groundwater component.