Impact of irrigated agriculture on groundwater resources in a temperate humid region

2018 
Abstract The groundwater irrigation expansion, and its multiple potential impacts on the quantity and quality of water resources, is not just restricted to areas that are water limited. In this study we present the seasonal impacts irrigation practices can have on groundwater resources in a temperate humid region, where the average annual rain/PET ratio is 1.0. In this system the irrigation expansion is solely supported by groundwater pumping, but despite this only 5 boreholes are monitored for hydraulic head data. In this study, we compensate the scarce hydrophysical dataset by incorporating environmental tracers (major ions, δ 18 O, δ 2 H and δ 13 C) and dating tracers ( 3 H, CFC, SF 6 and 14 C). Results indicate that at 9 of the 15 irrigation sites investigated, groundwater pumping for irrigation has induced the mixing of recent groundwater (up to 14 C mean residence time (MRT) of up to 9700 years. Secondly, although high nitrate loads in infiltrating waters were being diverted via the artificial subsurface drainage system, increases in fertiliser loads have resulted in higher NO 3 concentrations in younger groundwater (NO 3 : 9–45 mg/L, MRT 3  ≤ 9 mg/L, MRT > 20 years). The changes in flow pathways, induced by irrigation, also results in seasonal declines in groundwater NO 3 concentrations due to mixing with older waters. In temperate humid areas, such evaluations of the seasonal evolution of water residence time, mixing process, and agrochemical contaminants are an important contribution to real water resources management in irrigated catchments.
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