In many parts of the world, climate change has already caused a decline in groundwater recharge, whereas groundwater demand for drinking water production and irrigation continues to increase. In such regions, groundwater tables are steadily declining with major consequences for groundwater-surface water interactions. Predominantly gaining streams that rely on discharge of groundwater from the adjacent aquifer turn into predominantly losing streams whose water seeps into the underground. This reversal of groundwater-surface water interactions is associated with an increase of low river flows, drying of stream beds, and a switch of lotic ecosystems from perennial to intermittent, with consequences for fluvial and groundwater dependent ecosystems. Moreover, water infiltrating from rivers and streams can carry a complex mix of contaminants. Accordingly, the diversity and concentrations of compounds detected in groundwater has been increasing over the past decades. During low flow, stream and river discharge may consist mainly of treated wastewater. In losing stream systems, this contaminated water seeps into the adjoining aquifers. This threatens both ecosystems as well as drinking and irrigation water quality. Climate change is therefore severely altering landscape water balances, with groundwater-surface water-interactions having reached a tipping point in many cases. Current model projections harbor huge uncertainties and scientific evidence for these tipping points remains very limited. In particular, quantitative data on groundwater-surface water-interactions are scarce both on the local and the catchment scale. The result is poor public or political awareness, and appropriate management measures await implementation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2022.118649 | DOI Listing |
Starved of sediment and losing protective reeds, the Mississippi River's sprawling delta could soon vanish.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNat Commun
November 2024
Department of Hydraulics and Sanitation, São Carlos School of Engineering, University of São Paulo, São Carlos, São Paulo, SP, Brazil.
Isotopes Environ Health Stud
October 2024
Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, University of Georgia, Aiken, SC, USA.
Isotopic evidence of groundwater and stream water is frequently used to investigate water exchanges with groundwater. Monthly sampling of rain, stream water, and groundwater was conducted at Tims Branch watershed in South Carolina for the oxygen and hydrogen stable isotope (H and O) measurement, as well as pH and oxidation-reduction potential (ORP). Together with a mass balance perspective, it was determined that it takes a few weeks to one month for groundwater in the hyporheic zone to fully exchange with stream water.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNiger Med J
September 2024
Health System Management Division, University of Port Harcourt School of Public Health, Choba, Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
Background: With the limited number of trained health care providers in Nigeria, PPMVs are inevitable, especially in rural areas for the supply of drugs, and integration through appropriate referral practices is quintessential. This study assessed the knowledge, attitude, and practice of patient referral among PPMVs in a setting with limited hospital infrastructure.
Methodology: This cross-sectional descriptive survey was conducted in Obio-Akpor, Rivers State using a structured questionnaire that measured the participants' socio-demographic characteristics as well as knowledge, attitude, and practice of patient referral.
IEEE Trans Neural Netw Learn Syst
September 2024
Automatic lip-reading (ALR) is the task of recognizing words based on visual information obtained from the speaker's lip movements. In this study, we introduce event cameras, a novel type of sensing device, for ALR. Event cameras offer both technical and application advantages over conventional cameras for ALR due to their higher temporal resolution, less redundant visual information, and lower power consumption.
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