Abstract

Abstract. The groundwater resource contained within the sandy aquifers of the Swan Coastal Plain, south-west Western Australia, provides approximately 60 percent of the drinking water for the metropolitan population of Perth. Rainfall decline over the past three decades coupled with increasing water demand from a growing population has resulted in falling dam storage and groundwater levels. Projected future changes in climate across south-west Western Australia consistently show a decline in annual rainfall of between 5 and 15 percent. There is expected to be a reduction of diffuse recharge across the Swan Coastal Plain. This study aims to quantify the change in groundwater recharge in response to a range of future climate and land cover patterns across south-west Western Australia. Modelling the impact on the groundwater resource of potential climate change was achieved with a dynamically linked unsaturated/saturated groundwater model. A vertical flux manager was used in the unsaturated zone to estimate groundwater recharge using a variety of simple and complex models based on climate, land cover type (e.g. native trees, plantation, cropping, urban, wetland), soil type, and taking into account the groundwater depth. In the area centred on the city of Perth, Western Australia, the patterns of recharge change and groundwater level change are not consistent spatially, or consistently downward. In areas with land-use change, recharge rates have increased. Where rainfall has declined sufficiently, recharge rates are decreasing, and where compensating factors combine, there is little change to recharge. In the southwestern part of the study area, the patterns of groundwater recharge are dictated primarily by soil, geology and land cover. In the sand-dominated areas, there is little response to future climate change, because groundwater levels are shallow and much rainfall is rejected recharge. Where the combination of native vegetation and clayey surface soils restricts possible infiltration, recharge rates are very sensitive to reductions in rainfall. In the northern part of the study area, both climate and land cover strongly influence recharge rates. Recharge under native vegetation is minimal and is relatively higher where grazing and pasture systems have been introduced after clearing of native vegetation. In some areas, the recharge values can be reduced to almost zero, even under dryland agriculture, if the future climate becomes very dry.

Highlights

  • Modelling the effect of potential climate change on plant growth and various components of a point or catchment water balance is widespread

  • Dawes et al.: Modelling the effects of climate and land cover change temperature increased by +6.4 ◦C and rainfall decreased by 20 percent annually, stream flow increased by 5.7 percent

  • In the Wanneroo climate zone, there is significant land use change, mainly the legislated removal of pine plantations under which it is estimated there is close to zero recharge (Sharma and Pionke, 1984; DOW, 2009)

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Summary

Introduction

Modelling the effect of potential climate change on plant growth and various components of a point or catchment water balance is widespread. Eckhardt and Ulbrich (2003) used the SWAT-G model in the Dill Catchment in south-east Germany and found that mean groundwater recharge and stream flow could decrease by up to 50 percent, with negative effects on water quality, groundwater withdrawals and the generation of hydroelectric power. Ficklin et al (2009), using the SWAT model in the highly agricultural San Joaquin River catchment, found that increases in stream flow of up to 36 percent could be generated due to the interactions between shifts in crop growing times, irrigation demands, CO2, temperature and rainfall changes. Dawes et al.: Modelling the effects of climate and land cover change temperature increased by +6.4 ◦C and rainfall decreased by 20 percent annually, stream flow increased by 5.7 percent. Legesse et al (2003) used the PRMS model and found that, in a tropical catchment in Ethiopia, a decrease in rainfall of 10 percent led to a reduction in stream flow of 30 percent, while an increase in temperature of 1.5 ◦C reduced stream flow by 15 percent

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