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Wiley InterScience

JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association

JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association

Volume 41 Issue 3, Pages 517 - 536

Published Online: 8 Jun 2007

© 2010 American Water Resources Association



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GROUND WATER/SURFACE WATER RESPONSES TO GLOBAL CLIMATE SIMULATIONS, SANTA CLARA-CALLEGUAS BASIN, VENTURA, CALIFORNIA1
Randall T. Hanson 2 Michael D. Dettinger 2
  2 Respectively, Research Hydrologist, U.S. Geological Survey, Water Resources Division, California District, 5735 Kearny Villa Road, Suite O, San Diego, California 92123; and Research Hydrologist, Scripps Institution of Oceanography and U.S. Geological Survey, Climate Research Group, University of California, San Diego, California 92093 (E-Mail/Hanson: rthanson@usgs.gov).
 

1 Paper No. 03162 of the Journal of the American Water Resources Association (JAWRA) (Copyright © 2005). Discussions are open until December 1, 2005.

Copyright 2005 American Water Resources Association
KEYWORDS
ground water hydrology • surface water hydrology • climate change • climate cycles • modeling • water management

ABSTRACT

ABSTRACT: Climate variations can play an important, if not always crucial, role in successful conjunctive management of ground water and surface water resources. This will require accurate accounting of the links between variations in climate, recharge, and withdrawal from the resource systems, accurate projection or predictions of the climate variations, and accurate simulation of the responses of the resource systems. To assess linkages and predictability of climate influences on conjunctive management, global climate model (GCM) simulated precipitation rates were used to estimate inflows and outflows from a regional ground water model (RGWM) of the coastal aquifers of the Santa Clara-Calleguas Basin at Ventura, California, for 1950 to 1993. Interannual to interdecadal time scales of the El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO) and Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO) climate variations are imparted to simulated precipitation variations in the Southern California area and are realistically imparted to the simulated ground water level variations through the climate-driven recharge (and discharge) variations. For example, the simulated average ground water level response at a key observation well in the basin to ENSO variations of tropical Pacific sea surface temperatures is 1.2 m/°C, compared to 0.9 m/°C in observations. This close agreement shows that the GCM-RGWM combination can translate global scale climate variations into realistic local ground water responses. Probability distributions of simulated ground water level excursions above a local water level threshold for potential seawater intrusion compare well to the corresponding distributions from observations and historical RGWM simulations, demonstrating the combination's potential usefulness for water management and planning. Thus the GCM-RGWM combination could be used for planning purposes and — when the GCM forecast skills are adequate — for near term predictions.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1752-1688.2005.tb03752.x About DOI

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