Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin

Study region: Lower Arkansas River Basin (LARB) in Colorado, USA. Study focus: The process of implementing irrigation in large river basins often results in significant changes in hydrologic pathways and fluxes, such as canal seepage, runoff, recharge, pumping, and groundwater-river exchange. The ob...

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Main Authors: Salam A. Abbas, Ryan T. Bailey, Jeffrey G. Arnold, Michael J. White, Ali Mirchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-02-01
Series:Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581825000126
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author Salam A. Abbas
Ryan T. Bailey
Jeffrey G. Arnold
Michael J. White
Ali Mirchi
author_facet Salam A. Abbas
Ryan T. Bailey
Jeffrey G. Arnold
Michael J. White
Ali Mirchi
author_sort Salam A. Abbas
collection DOAJ
description Study region: Lower Arkansas River Basin (LARB) in Colorado, USA. Study focus: The process of implementing irrigation in large river basins often results in significant changes in hydrologic pathways and fluxes, such as canal seepage, runoff, recharge, pumping, and groundwater-river exchange. The objective of this study is to quantify the hydrologic fluxes in a highly irrigated river basin and investigate the controls on these fluxes, using the Lower Arkansas River Basin (LARB) (64,000 km2) in Colorado, USA as a demonstration case. We use the SWAT+ watershed model, enhanced with the new groundwater module gwflow, canal seepage, and irrigation application driven by daily canal diversions and groundwater pumping. The model is tested against streamflow and groundwater head, showing good performance along the Arkansas River and the alluvial corridor. New hydrological insights for the region: On average, precipitation in the basin is 380 mm/yr., of which 2 % (10 mm/yr.) becomes recharge and 2 % is irrigation (80 % surface water irrigation). Water yield is 18 mm/yr. (5 %), principally surface runoff and net groundwater discharge. Canal seepage is only 0.2 % of precipitation. Irrigation fluxes, canal and plant ET are highest in the downstream regions. Sensitivity analysis reveals the controlling watershed features on streamflow, groundwater head, and hydrologic fluxes for each region. Main parameters include streambed conductivity, plant uptake factors, snowmelt factors, aquifer properties, soil available water capacity, and soil percolation coefficient, with each parameter ranked by influence for each region within the basin. The calibrated models can be used to explore the impact of changes in climate, irrigation practices, and general water management schemes.
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spelling doaj-art-ee36e68003fc412bb9b215be5b639d582025-01-22T05:42:23ZengElsevierJournal of Hydrology: Regional Studies2214-58182025-02-0157102188Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basinSalam A. Abbas0Ryan T. Bailey1Jeffrey G. Arnold2Michael J. White3Ali Mirchi4Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USA; Corresponding author.Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO 80521, USAGrassland Soil and Water Research Laboratory, USDA–ARS, Temple, TX 76502, USAGrassland Soil and Water Research Laboratory, USDA–ARS, Temple, TX 76502, USADepartment of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, OK 74078, USAStudy region: Lower Arkansas River Basin (LARB) in Colorado, USA. Study focus: The process of implementing irrigation in large river basins often results in significant changes in hydrologic pathways and fluxes, such as canal seepage, runoff, recharge, pumping, and groundwater-river exchange. The objective of this study is to quantify the hydrologic fluxes in a highly irrigated river basin and investigate the controls on these fluxes, using the Lower Arkansas River Basin (LARB) (64,000 km2) in Colorado, USA as a demonstration case. We use the SWAT+ watershed model, enhanced with the new groundwater module gwflow, canal seepage, and irrigation application driven by daily canal diversions and groundwater pumping. The model is tested against streamflow and groundwater head, showing good performance along the Arkansas River and the alluvial corridor. New hydrological insights for the region: On average, precipitation in the basin is 380 mm/yr., of which 2 % (10 mm/yr.) becomes recharge and 2 % is irrigation (80 % surface water irrigation). Water yield is 18 mm/yr. (5 %), principally surface runoff and net groundwater discharge. Canal seepage is only 0.2 % of precipitation. Irrigation fluxes, canal and plant ET are highest in the downstream regions. Sensitivity analysis reveals the controlling watershed features on streamflow, groundwater head, and hydrologic fluxes for each region. Main parameters include streambed conductivity, plant uptake factors, snowmelt factors, aquifer properties, soil available water capacity, and soil percolation coefficient, with each parameter ranked by influence for each region within the basin. The calibrated models can be used to explore the impact of changes in climate, irrigation practices, and general water management schemes.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581825000126SWAT+ gwflowSurface–groundwater interactionsSensitivity analysisIntensive irrigationIrrigation canalHydrologic fluxes
spellingShingle Salam A. Abbas
Ryan T. Bailey
Jeffrey G. Arnold
Michael J. White
Ali Mirchi
Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies
SWAT+ gwflow
Surface–groundwater interactions
Sensitivity analysis
Intensive irrigation
Irrigation canal
Hydrologic fluxes
title Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
title_full Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
title_fullStr Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
title_full_unstemmed Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
title_short Modeling agro-hydrological surface-subsurface processes in a semi-arid, intensively irrigated river basin
title_sort modeling agro hydrological surface subsurface processes in a semi arid intensively irrigated river basin
topic SWAT+ gwflow
Surface–groundwater interactions
Sensitivity analysis
Intensive irrigation
Irrigation canal
Hydrologic fluxes
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214581825000126
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