Comparison of groundwater storage changes over losing and gaining aquifers of China using GRACE satellites, modeling and in-situ observations.

Sci Total Environ

International Research Center of Big Data for Sustainable Development Goals, Key Laboratory of Digital Earth Science, Aerospace Information Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100094, China.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Groundwater depletion is a significant issue in China, particularly in its extensively used aquifers, and studying changes in groundwater storage (GWS) is complicated due to limited data.
  • A study analyzed GWS changes in eighteen major aquifers using GRACE data, models, and groundwater level observations, revealing a general decline in GWS, with some areas gaining and others losing water.
  • The findings indicate differing trends and cycles of GWS across regions, emphasizing the need for tailored regional groundwater management strategies based on specific local conditions.

Article Abstract

Groundwater depletion in intensively exploited aquifers of China has been widely recognized, whereas an overall examination of groundwater storage (GWS) changes over major aquifers remains challenging due to limited data and notable uncertainties. Here, we present a study to explore GWS changes over eighteen major aquifers covering an area of 1,680,000 km in China using data obtained from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiments (GRACE), global models, and in-situ groundwater level observations. The analysis aims to reveal the discrepancy in annual trends, amplitudes, and phases associated with GWS changes among different aquifers. It is found that GWS changes in the studied aquifers represent a spatial pattern of 'Wet-gets-more, Dry-gets-less'. An overall decreasing trend of -4.65 ± 0.34 km/yr is observed by GRACE from 2005 to 2016, consisting of a significant (p < 0.05) increase of 47.28 ± 3.48 km in 7 aquifers and decrease of 103.56 ± 2.4 km (∼2.6 times the full storage capacity of the Three Gorges Reservoir) in 10 aquifers summed over the 12 years. The annual GWS normally reaches a peak in late July with an area-weighted average annual amplitude of 19 mm, showing notable discrepancy in phases and amplitudes between the losing aquifers (12 mm in middle August) in northern China and gaining aquifers (28 mm in early July) mostly in southern China. GRACE estimates are generally comparable, but can be notably different, with the results obtained from model simulations and in-situ observations at aquifer scale, with the area-weighted average correlation coefficients of 0.6 and 0.5, respectively. This study highlights different GWS changes of losing and gaining aquifers in response to coupled impacts of hydrogeology, climate and human interventions, and calls for divergent adaptions in regional groundwater management.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.173514DOI Listing

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