澳大利亚墨累-达令盆地北部对水文干旱的适应能力

R. Quentin Grafton, Long Chu, R. Kingsford, G. Bino, John F. Williams
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引用次数: 4

摘要

我们对澳大利亚墨累-达令盆地北部河流流量下降的问题作出回应,该地区遭受水文干旱和干旱趋势。我们划分了气象趋势和人为驱动因素对年流量的影响,量化了年流量下降对水鸟丰度的影响,估计了流量变化对生态系统恢复力的影响,并计算了河内水再分配的净效益。水文干旱的人为驱动因素是通过比较下达令河(以下简称巴尔卡河)和相邻的帕鲁河来评估的,前者有大量的记录取水量,而后者很少有记录取水量。研究结果表明:(1)巴尔卡河近年来的流量减少中,只有约三分之一是由于气象干燥趋势造成的;(2) 1983-2000年和2001-2020年,两河水鸟物种丰富度和丰度均出现显著下降;(3)巴尔卡河沿岸水鸟数量下降幅度大于帕鲁河沿岸;(4)以水鸟数量衡量的生态系统恢复能力在帕鲁河上更大。我们的四步框架适用于任何具有充足时间序列数据的集水区,并支持对水文干旱的适应性响应。这篇文章是皇家学会科学+会议议题“人类世的干旱风险”的一部分。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Resilience to hydrological droughts in the northern Murray-Darling Basin, Australia
We respond to the problem of declining streamflows in the northern Murray–Darling Basin, Australia, a region that suffers from hydrological droughts and a drying trend. We partitioned the effect of meteorological trends from anthropogenic drivers on annual streamflow, quantified the effect of annual streamflow decline on waterbird abundance, estimated the effects of streamflow change on a measure of ecosystem resilience, and calculated the net benefits of in-stream water reallocation. The anthropogenic drivers of hydrological droughts were assessed by comparing the Lower Darling (hereafter the Barka) River, which has large recorded water extractions, with the adjacent Paroo River, which has very little recorded water extractions. Findings include: (1) only about one-third of the recent reduced streamflow of the Barka River is due to a meteorological drying trend; (2) statistically significant declines in waterbird species richness and abundance have occurred on both rivers between 1983–2000 and 2001–2020; (3) declines in waterbird abundance have been much larger along the Barka River than the Paroo River; and (4) ecosystem resilience, as measured by waterbird abundance, wasgreater on the Paroo River. Our four-step framework is applicable in any catchment with adequate time-series data and supports adaptive responses to hydrological droughts. This article is part of the Royal Society Science+ meeting issue ‘Drought risk in the Anthropocene’.
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