Abstract

AbstractThe impact of climate change on surface water resources is reasonably well studied. However, the impact on groundwater resources has only been considered by a few studies worldwide. Here we present an analysis of climate change impacts on groundwater resources in a well‐instrumented 6,800‐km2 watershed in the Laurentian Great Lakes Basin. We employ a physics‐based modeling pipeline consisting of an ensemble of high‐resolution regional climate model projections based on the Weather Research and Forecasting model and the fully integrated three‐dimensional hydrologic model HydroGeoSphere. The Weather Research and Forecasting model is run at a resolution as fine as 10 km using two different physics configurations, while HydroGeoSphere simulates the terrestrial hydrosphere at subkilometer scale, from deep groundwater to surface water, including surface water‐groundwater interactions. The two Weather Research and Forecasting model physics configurations exhibit opposite climate change responses in summer precipitation. The hydrologic simulations follow the climate forcing, but due to the memory of the subsurface, differences in summer affect the entire seasonal cycle. In the drier climate scenario groundwater levels and recharge decline, while in the wetter scenario groundwater levels rise (recharge remains unchanged). Soil moisture changes accordingly, but primarily in late summer. It is also shown that the magnitude of climate change impacts on groundwater is strongly modulated by local physiographic features. In particular, regions where the groundwater table is deep (below 2 m; 15% of the area) show a high sensitivity to changes in climate forcing. Furthermore, changes in groundwater levels, recharge, and soil moisture typically occur in the same regions, suggesting potentially compounding impacts.

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