Abstract

Many agricultural production regions in the world have been experiencing groundwater resource depletion, which threatens water and food security if mitigation practices are not developed and implemented. To understand how changing land use and irrigation schedule impact groundwater, a coupled SWAT-MODFLOW model was applied to determine groundwater depletion mitigation strategy in a humid region, the Big Sunflower River Watershed (BSRW) in Mississippi, USA. It was found that converting grasslands to forests contributed to reducing groundwater declining. Simulated results indicated that the watershed lost 749, 586, and 381 mm yr−1 of water through surface runoff in the wet, normal and dry years, respectively. The amount of groundwater that moved into the vadose zone to help satisfy crop water demand ranged from 700 to 750 mm yr−1. Precipitation increased the groundwater recharge during the rainy season from fall to spring. Annual recharge rate was only 34–50 mm. Groundwater level dropped 0.2–0.5 m in crop irrigation seasons (May to August). Land use dataset showed 81 % of the area is cropland, with soybean, corn, rice, and cotton accounting for 64 % of the total cropland area in BSRW. The planted area of corn and soybean significantly increased while the area of cotton area was tremendously reduced. Corn, soybean, and rice consumed approximately 96 % of the total amount of groundwater irrigation. This study indicated that irrigation scheduling based on plant water demand could save 47 % of groundwater currently used by conventional irrigation. The improved irrigation schedule could reduce groundwater decline by 0.01–2.05 m across the watershed, and mitigate the declines by 1.35–2.05 m in the depression cone in the central east part of the watershed. The results can assist with planning land and water use and developing sustainable groundwater management practices focused on locations of high groundwater withdrawals in other regions around the world.

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