Abstract

In South Korea, groundwater intended for use in greenhouse cultivation is collected from shallow riverside aquifers as part of agricultural activities during the winter season. This study quantified the effects of intensive groundwater intake on aquifers during the winter and examined the roles of nearby rivers in this process. Observation data were collected for approximately two years from six wells and two river-level observation points on the study site. Furthermore, the river water levels before and after the weir structures were examined in detail, because they are determined by artificial structures in the river. The structures have significant impacts on the inflow and outflow from the river to the groundwater reservoirs. As a result, a decline in groundwater levels owing to groundwater depletion was observed during the water curtain cultivation (WCC) period in the winter season. In addition, we found that the groundwater level increased owing to groundwater recharge due to rainfall and induced recharge by rivers during the spring–summer period after the end of the WCC period. MODFLOW, a three-dimensional difference model, was used to simulate the groundwater level decreases and increases around the WCC area in Cheongwon-gun. Time-variable recharge data provided by the soil and water assessment tool model, SWAT for watershed hydrology, was used to determine the amount of groundwater recharge that was input to the groundwater model. The groundwater level time series observations collected from observation wells during the two-year simulation period (2012 to 2014) were compared with the simulation values. In addition, to determine the groundwater depletion of the entire demonstration area and the sustainability of the WCC, the quantitative water budget was analyzed using integrated hydrologic analysis. The result indicated that a 2.5 cm groundwater decline occurred on average every year at the study site. Furthermore, an analysis method that reflects the stratification and boundary conditions of underground aquifers, hydrogeologic properties, hydrological factors, and artificial recharge scenarios was established and simulated with injection amounts of 20%, 40%, and 60%. This study suggested a proper artificial recharge method of injecting water by wells using riverside groundwater in the study area.

Highlights

  • Water is one of the most important resources on Earth and water used for irrigation accounts for a significant portion of the global water demand [1]

  • To measure the groundwater amount used by water curtain cultivation (WCC), Moon et al [23] calculated the total amount of groundwater taken up for WCC before it was discharged to the Musimcheon from the agricultural waterway in the studied site

  • Groundwater flows from the south to the north, and rapid changes in the groundwater level were observed around the weir in the Musimcheon

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Summary

Introduction

Water is one of the most important resources on Earth and water used for irrigation accounts for a significant portion of the global water demand [1]. In monsoon or semi-arid climates, rainfall is concentrated during one period in a year Two opposite activities (groundwater recharge and abstraction from shallow aquifers) occur in accordance with the seasonal cycle. This is observed in large agricultural areas in monsoon climates. Perrin [10] found that the locally heterogeneous pattern of groundwater depletion intensifies owing to seasonal characteristics, and that the imbalance worsens during low-rainfall years. Even rechargeable groundwater areas are influenced by factors that cause or interfere with recharging (i.e., adjacent geographic characteristics, climate, relationship with rivers, and use of public water). A highly precise analysis that considers multiple hydrological and geologic parameters, as well as site-specific conditions, is required to determine whether the groundwater in the study area is a sustainably available resource

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