无节制取水和气候变化对塔纳湖分流域水供需缺口的影响

Mintamer Ferede, A. Haile, Assefa Gedle, Alemshet Kebede, Selamawit Damtew Amare, M. Taye
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摘要

本研究评估了多种气候和非气候因素对埃塞俄比亚塔纳湖分流域水资源的影响。研究重点关注三个驱动因素:土地利用变化、灌溉扩展和气候变化(CC),以及它们对整个次流域当前和未来水资源可用性的影响。该研究在谷歌地球引擎(GEE)平台上使用随机森林(RF)机器学习分类器来检测土地利用土地覆被变化(LULC),并绘制实际灌溉面积图。气候灾害小组的红外降水量和温度数据与测站数据一起用于评估气候变化对塔纳湖子流域水供应的影响。供需关系是以塔纳湖分流域内的古马拉集水区为实验点进行的。根据 LULC 分析,种植园、耕地、裸地、建筑用地和湿地呈上升趋势,而森林、灌木丛和草地呈下降趋势。以牺牲天然林、灌木林和草地为代价的农作物种植面积的增加可能会导致径流/洪水、水土流失严重和地下水补给率降低。实际灌溉面积绘图分析表明,湖岸附近和子流域上游地区灌溉面积广泛。气候变化分析表明,由于最高气温的升高,灌溉期间的潜在蒸散量呈上升趋势。由于作物生长需要更多的水,灌溉期潜在蒸散量的增加造成了研究期间和未来时期的缺水。古马拉集水区的估计流量在未来一段时间内呈上升趋势。集水区的供需关系表明,古马拉集水区当前和未来时期的水量分布不均,导致灌溉取水不平衡。研究表明,气候变化、土地植被变化和灌溉面积的无节制扩张可能会增加灌溉用水需求,从而增加未满足的需求,这可能会导致用户之间的利益冲突。因此,应采取可持续的水资源管理措施,如土地管理措施和灌溉的适应性管理,以防止或减少水资源需求冲突的发生。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Implications of uncontrolled water withdrawal and climate change on the water supply and demand gap in the Lake Tana sub-basin
This study evaluates the implications of multiple climatic and non-climatic factors on the water resource of the Lake Tana sub-basin, Ethiopia. The study focuses on three drivers: land use change, irrigation expansion, and climate change (CC), and their impact on the current and future water availability across the sub-basin. The study uses a random forest (RF) machine learning classifier in the Google Earth Engine (GEE) platform to detect land use land cover change (LULC) and for mapping the actual irrigated-area. The Climate Hazards Group InfraRed Precipitation and temperature data were used with station data to evaluate the implication of CC on the water availability of Lake Tana sub-basin. The supply-demand relationship was done for Gumara catchment within Tana sub-basin as an experimental site. Based on the LULC analysis, plantation, cropland, bare lands, built-up, and wetland showed an increasing trend, while forest, bush land, and grassland showed a decreasing trend. The increasing rate of crop land in the expense of natural forest, shrub land, grassland may cause runoff/flood, high soil erosion, and lower rate of groundwater recharge. The actual irrigated area mapping analysis shows a widespread irrigation near the Lake Shore and upstream parts of the sub-basin. The climate change analysis shows an increasing trend of potential evapotranspiration during the irrigation period attributed to increase in maximum temperature. The rising of potential evapotranspiration during the irrigation period creates a water shortage in the study and future periods as the crops need more water for growth. The estimated stream flow for Gumara catchment shows an increasing trend for the future period. The supply-demand relationship of the catchment shows an uneven distribution of water in the Gumara catchment both in the current and future periods resulting in unbalance abstraction of irrigation water. The study reveals that climate change, land cover change, and uncontrolled expansion of irrigated land area are likely to increase the unmet demand by increasing irrigation water demand, and this can cause conflict of interest between the users. Therefore, sustainable water resource management practices such as land management practices, and adaptive management of irrigation should be applicable to prevent or reduce the occurrence of conflict over the water demand.
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