Geography 210: Physical Geography and Environmental Issues: This Is WATER Week
Geography 210: Physical Geography and Environmental Issues: This Is WATER Week
The USEPA National Wetlands OfficeIts Role in Wetland Policy and Protection
Doreen M. Vetter
Special Assistant for Water Office of the Administrator U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
Friday October 6, 2006 1:30-2:30 pm Heffner Wetland Building Lobby Olentangy River Wetland Research Park
Heat capacity Universal solvent High surface tension Exists in all 3 phases at normal Earth surface temperatures Solid H2O is lighter than the liquid H2O Sunlight penetrates water
Hydrological Cycle
Reservoirs Fluxes
Abundance is not the problem, delivering enough when its needed is.
0.007% water on Earth is renewable and available for use on a sustainable basis.
Compared to other minerals, water is inexpensive Usage is 1000 x that of all other mineral production Usage is now a significant fraction of that available Usage is on-sustainable in many regions of the world
> 50% of humanity will face water shortages within 50 years, UN report, January 2003
"water-stressed" countries
US will overuse available surface water resources by 13% in 2020, USWRC $400 billion /year global industry Privatization Water, The Next Oil?
Hydrologic cycle
Removes salt from water Filtration: forcing saline water through salt-impermeable membranes Each m3 of sea water contains 40kg (88 lb) of salt Salinity = 4%. >500 desal plants now exist. Cost-prohibitive 10x that of existing water supply in US Requires large amounts of energy. Environmental issue What to do with the very salty water coming out of the desal plant?
the hydrologic cycle of water from the oceans and the continents to the atmosphere through evapotranspiration; back to the ocean and continent surfaces through precipitation and eventually returning to the oceans through surface runoff (rivers) after storage (lakes, ground water, ice sheets) Figure 15.1, p. 513
US Water Budget
Water Budget: model balancing inputs & outputs Simple annual budget : (Precipitation Evaporation Infiltration = Runoff)
Useful in water resource management Supply is NEVER greater than runoff
Precipitation is variable
Droughts happen
That sucks
Loss of land fertility Crop failure Famine Potential Water Resource Management
Groundwater
Precip falling on land: 1. Evapotranspiration 2. Runoff 3. Infiltration Percolation through soil water, unsaturated zone, water table
Water table
Occurs below the water table, where the soil is saturated Aquifer = undergrnd zone where water can be extracted at useful rate Depletion by wells causes drawdown a cone of depression in the water table As many wells exploit an aquifer, their cones of depression merge to create a general lowering of the water table
Surface-Groundwater interactions
Groundwater issues
~1/2 Americans use groundwater as primary drinking water accounts for 20% of US water usage Overdraft: when discharge (output) > recharge (input) Problems: land subsidence, salt water intrusion
Composed of water bearing sands and gravel, i.e. groundwater filled during melt of ice sheet in last ice age. current 20 x overdraft, -> 1.74 feet per year (1,082,631 acre ft). Ground North Plains Groundwater water Conservation District mining (http://www.npwd.org)
Subsidence:
Groundwater level changes as a result of pumping in the TexasOklahoma High Plains region.
Surface Water
Hydrograph
Q=A*V
Urbanization effect
Hydrograph fluctuations
Flooding
Most universally experienced natural hazard. Floodplain Urbanization and flooding Land use planning
In stream uses
Off-stream use: removed from source, returned Consumptive use: removed, but not returned In-stream use: navigation, hydro power, habitats, recreation Water Resource Management Stream diversions
Trends by category
Major use: irrigation and thermoelectric Irrigation use leveled by ~1980 Industry use declined after ~1980 Public and rural supply use increased (POPULATION)
Landsat TM satellite image showing leaf chlorophyll reflectance in red, source: KSU Geography
Water Conservation
The Aral Sea's volume has decreased by 75 percent , the equivalent of draining Lakes Erie and Ontario.
is the careful use and protection of water resources. Involves both quality and quantity. Improved agricultural irrigation could reduce w/drawl by 20-30%; how?
Price water to encourage conservation Use lined or covered canals to reduce seepage and evaporation
only 10% of national water usage Most consumed in bathroom & clothes washing Concentrated urban populations How to conserve?
Xeriscaping (i.e. no green lawns in AZ!)
Wetlands
1. 2. 3. 4.
Important ecologically and aesthetically Defined: areas inundated by water; or where land is saturated to a depth of a few cm a few days/yr Functions:
Water (and carbon) storage; groundwater recharge Natural filters (kidneys) Highly productive ecosystems (habitats) Flood control
5.
6.
7. 8.
Reduce downstream flooding Purify water Sites of concentrated nutrient cycling Groundwater recharge Nursery grounds for fish, shellfish, birds and other animals 45% of endangered animals depend on wetlands Coastal wetlands form barrier to storm surges Aesthetically pleasing
1% of US wetlands are lost every 2 yrs; est. 90% of total freshwater lost in 200 yrs Compensatory restoration required by National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 Legal success ecological success Self-design as ecosystem property: natural processes contribute to species introduction and selection
Summary
Water enables life Water we can use is a tiny fraction of total on Earth Water supply & usage involves many interactions; a water budget is needed Water consumption will likely increase with population, even as w/drawl decreases slightly Water w/drawl conflicts with in-stream needs Groundwater use and overuse has resulted in problems Water use for agriculture is most significant area for conservation
Summary (cont.)
Wetlands are important components at the ecosystem level, benefiting people and other ecosystems Flooding is perhaps the most universal hazard in the world, enhanced by urbanization; best approached with land-use planning We are facing a growing water shortage
"Thousands have lived without love, not one without water." -- W. H. Auden