Difference between revisions of "Surface water abstraction"

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==Useful references==
 
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==Other relevant information==
 
==Other relevant information==
  
 
[[Category:Pressures]][[Category:01. Water abstractions]]
 
[[Category:Pressures]][[Category:01. Water abstractions]]

Revision as of 15:22, 14 November 2016

Surface water abstraction

01. Water abstractions

General description

Water abstractions may be taken directly from the flowing waters in the channel (surface water abstraction), or indirectly from wells by pumping water from aquifers that may be closely connected to rivers (groundwater abstraction). Furthermore, water abstraction from rivers can be achieved through inter-basin flow transfer schemes, whereby the donor river system has its flow reduced below its diversion.

Effect/Impact on (including literature citations)

Dewson et al. (2007)[1] found that water abstraction decreased water velocity, water depth, and wetted channel width and changes in thermal regime and water chemistry in 90 % of the case studies analysed; James et al. (2008)[2] found that flow reduction significantly decreased water velocity (60–69%) in all streams, while depth (18–61%) and wetted width (24–31%) also tended to decrease. Kleynhans (1996)[3] described loss of fast flowing instream habitat types in streams affected by water abstraction. Sedimentation process may increase and fine sediment deposition increases the most in farmland streams affected by water abstraction (James et al. 2008)[4]. Also, with decreased flows the Coarse Particulate Organic Matter (CPOM) retention rate is increased (Dewson et al, 2007)[5]. If floods are reduced in main stem river channels, fine sediments delivered by less abstracted tributaries may no longer be flushed downstream but may accumulate on the river bed, reducing its permeability (Kondolf and Wilcock 1996)[6]. When water abstraction is intense, channel drought impacts may be disproportionately severe, especially when certain critical thresholds are exceeded. For example, ecological changes may be gradual while a riffle dries but cessation of flow causes abrupt loss of a specific habitat, alteration of physico-chemical conditions in pools downstream, and fragmentation of the river ecosystem (Boulton, 2003)[7].

Changes in thermal regime and water chemistry were found in rivers affected by flow withdrawals by Dewson et al., (2007)[8], and James et al. (2008)[9] found that flow reduction decreased the water temperature range by 18–26%, although it had little effect on average surface water temperatures.

Reduced flows within some river reaches may present impassable obstacles for fish migrations, either by decreasing water depths to below critical levels or by completely drying up entire reaches of river, as occurs on the San Joaquin River of California as a consequence of diversions from Friant Dam (Cain 1997[10]). Also, where baseflows are artificially reduced, dissolved oxygen levels fall to lethal levels in reaches affected by eutrophic or high temperature discharges (e.g., Loire River, France), or dredging (e.g., the Lower San Joaquin River, California), preventing anadromous salmonids from migrating upstream to suitable habitats (Kondolf et al., 2006[11]).

Water extraction can also entrain aquatic organisms. For example, Pringle and Scatena (1999)[12] showed that water extraction removes more than 50% of migrating shrimp larvae in a river located in the Caribbean National Forest in Puerto Rico.

In relation to macroinvertebrates, flow reduction has not been observed to impact on the abundance of common pool macroinvertebrates or on the abundance, vertical distribution or community composition of hyporheic macroinvertebrates. James et al. (2008)[13] found that aquatic macroinvertebrates are resistant to short-term, severe flow reduction as long as some water remains. However, in general, invertebrate abundance may increase or decrease in response to decreased flow, whereas invertebrate richness commonly decreases because habitat diversity decreases (Dewson et al., 2007[14]). Furthermore, Muñoz & Prat (1996) found a highly significant reduction of macroinvertebrate density and taxon number at disturbed stations as consequences of increased pollutant concentrations under abstraction conditions.

In dry countries, deterioration of riparian habitat integrity is a widespread consequence of water abstraction: during droughts tree deaths are common (Kleynhans, 1996)[15].

Conceptual framework representing water abstraction effects on HYMO processes and variables and their ecological impacts (HYMO is for Hydromorphological and PQ for Physico-chemical).

Case studies where this pressure is present

Possible restoration, rehabilitation and mitigation measures

Useful references

  1. Dewson, Z.S., James, A.B.W. & Death, R.G., 2007. Stream ecosystem functioning under reduced flow conditions. Ecological Applications 17: 1797–1808.
  2. James, A.B.W., Dewson, Z.O.Ë.S., Death, R.G., 2008. Do stream macroinvertebrates use instream refugia in response to severe short-term flow reduction in New Zealand streams? Freshwater Biology 53: 1316–1334.
  3. Kleynhans, C., 1996. A qualitative procedure for the assessment of the habitat integrity status of the Luvuvhu River (Limpopo system, South Africa). Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Stress and Recovery 5: 41–54.
  4. James, A.B.W., Dewson, Z.O.Ë.S., Death, R.G., 2008. Do stream macroinvertebrates use instream refugia in response to severe short-term flow reduction in New Zealand streams? Freshwater Biology 53: 1316–1334.
  5. Dewson, Z.S., James, A.B.W. & Death, R.G., 2007. Stream ecosystem functioning under reduced flow conditions. Ecological Applications 17: 1797–1808.
  6. Kondolf, G. M., and P. R. Wilcock 1996. The flushing flow problem: defining and evaluating objectives. Water Resources Research 32: 2589-2599.
  7. Boulton, 2003. Parallels and contrasts in the effects of drought on stream macroinvertebrate assemblages - Google Académico. Freshwater Biology 48: 1173–1185.
  8. Dewson, Z.S., James, A.B.W. & Death, R.G., 2007. Stream ecosystem functioning under reduced flow conditions. Ecological Applications 17: 1797–1808.
  9. James, A.B.W., Dewson, Z.O.Ë.S., Death, R.G., 2008. Do stream macroinvertebrates use instream refugia in response to severe short-term flow reduction in New Zealand streams? Freshwater Biology 53: 1316–1334.
  10. Cain, J. R. 1997. Hydrologic and geomorphic changes to the San Joaquin River between Friant Dam and Gravely Ford and implications for restoration of Chinook salmon (Oncorhynchus tshawytscha). Thesis. University of California, Berkeley, California, USA.
  11. Kondolf, G. M., A. J. Boulton, S. O'Daniel, G. C. Poole, F. J. Rahel, E. H. Stanley, E. Wohl, A. Bång, J. Carlstrom, C. Cristoni, H. Huber, S. Koljonen, P. Louhi, and K. Nakamura. 2006. Process-based ecological river restoration: visualizing three-dimensional connectivity and dynamic vectors to recover lost linkages. Ecology and Society 11(2): 5. http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol11/iss2/art5/
  12. Pringle, C. M., and F. N. Scatena 1999 Freshwater resource development. case studies from Puerto Rico and Costa Rica. Pages 114-121 in L. U. Hatch and M. E. Swisher, editors. Managed ecosystems: the mesoamerican experience. Oxford University Press, New York, New York.
  13. James, A.B.W., Dewson, Z.O.Ë.S., Death, R.G., 2008. Do stream macroinvertebrates use instream refugia in response to severe short-term flow reduction in New Zealand streams? Freshwater Biology 53: 1316–1334.
  14. Dewson, Z.S., James, A.B.W. & Death, R.G., 2007. A review of the consequences of decreased flow for instream habitat and macroinvertebrates. Journal Information, 26(3).
  15. Kleynhans, C., 1996. A qualitative procedure for the assessment of the habitat integrity status of the Luvuvhu River (Limpopo system, South Africa). Journal of Aquatic Ecosystem Stress and Recovery 5: 41–54.

Other relevant information