Despite some years with significant snowfalls,
long-term drought conditions in the Great Basin region of Nevada, California,
Arizona, and Utah, along with increasing water demands, have strained water
reserves in the western U.S. As a result, inland bodies of water, including the
Great Salt Lake pictured here, have shrunk dramatically, exposing lakebeds that
may release toxic dust when dried.
Dorothy Hall/University of Maryland
Record snowfall in recent years has not
been enough to offset long-term drying conditions and increasing groundwater
demands in the U.S. Southwest, according to a new analysis of NASA satellite
data.
Declining water levels in the Great Salt
Lake and Lake Mead have been testaments to a megadrought afflicting western North
America since 2000. But surface water only accounts for a
fraction of the Great Basin watershed that covers most of Nevada and large
portions of California, Utah, and Oregon. Far more of the region’s water is
underground. That has historically made it difficult to track the impact of
droughts on the overall water content of the Great Basin.
A new look at 20 years of data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) series of
satellites shows that the decline in groundwater in the Great Basin far exceeds
stark surface water losses. Over about the past two decades, the underground
water supply in the basin has fallen by 16.5 cubic miles (68.7 cubic
kilometers). That’s roughly two-thirds as much water as the entire state of
California uses in a year and about six times the total volume of water that
was left in Lake Mead, the nation’s largest reservoir, at the end of 2023.
While new maps show a seasonal rise in
water each spring due to melting snow from higher elevations, University of
Maryland earth scientist Dorothy Hall said occasional snowy winters are
unlikely to stop the dramatic water level decline that’s been underway in the
U.S. Southwest.
The finding came about as Hall and
colleagues studied the contribution of annual snowmelt to Great Basin water
levels. “In years like the 2022-23 winter, I expected that the record amount of
snowfall would really help to replenish the groundwater supply,” Hall said.
“But overall, the decline continued.” The research was published in March 2024
in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.
“A major reason for the decline is the
upstream water diversion for agriculture and households,” Hall said.
Populations in the states that rely on Great Basin water supplies have grown by
6% to 18% since 2010, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. “As the population
increases, so does water use.”
Runoff, increased evaporation, and water needs of plants suffering hot, dry conditions in the region are amplifying the problem. “With the ongoing threat of drought,” Hall said, “farmers downstream often can’t get enough water.”
Gravity measurements from the GRACE series of
satellites show that the decline in water levels in the Great Basin region from
April 2002 to September 2023 has most severely affected portions of southern
California (indicated in red).
D.K. Hall et al./Geophysical Research Letters 2024
While measurements of the water table in
the Great Basin — including the depths required to connect wells to depleted
aquifers — have hinted at declining groundwater, data from the joint German
DLR-NASA GRACE missions provide a clearer picture of the total loss of water
supply in the region. The original GRACE satellites, which flew from March 2002 to October 2017, and the successor GRACE–Follow
On (GRACE–FO) satellites, which
launched in May 2018 and are still active, track changes in Earth’s gravity due
primarily to shifting water mass.
GRACE-based maps of fluctuating water
levels have improved recently as the team has learned to parse more and finer
details from the dataset. “Improved spatial resolution helped in this study to
distinguish the location of the mass trends in the Western U.S. roughly ten
times better than prior analyses,” said Bryant Loomis, who leads GRACE data
analysis at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
The diminishing water supplies of the
U.S. Southwest could have consequences for both humans and wildlife, Hall said.
In addition to affecting municipal water supplies and limiting agricultural
irrigation, “It exposes the lake beds, which often harbor toxic minerals from
agricultural runoff, waste, and anything else that ends up in the lakes.”
In Utah, a century of industrial
chemicals accumulated in the Great Salt Lake, along with airborne pollutants
from present-day mining and oil refinement, have settled in the water. The
result is a hazardous muck that is uncovered and dried as the lake shrinks.
Dust blown from dry lake beds, in turn, exacerbates air pollution in the
region. Meanwhile, shrinking lakes are putting a strain on bird populations
that rely on the lakes as stopovers during migration.
According to the new findings, Hall
said, “The ultimate solution will have to include wiser water management.”
By James
R. Riordon
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA Satellites Find Snow Didn’t Offset Southwest US Groundwater Loss - NASA
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