Spatial Patterns of Water Supply and Use in California

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Pub Date : 2024-06-11 DOI:10.15447/sfews.2024v22iss2art1
John Helly, Daniel Cayan, Jennifer Stricklin, Laurel Dehaan
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Abstract

Spatial and temporal patterns of water supply and water use were analyzed from 475 Detailed Analysis Units by County (DAUCOs) spatial units across California over 2002 to 2016 to evaluate how precipitation variability affected the water balance. Many DAUCOs have relatively low total water supply variability compared to state-wide precipitation. Such low variability is the result of switching between water supply sources as needed to maintain a reliable total supply. We used multiple approaches to explore these variations which involved four categories of water supply (local, groundwater, imported, and other) and two categories of water use (agricultural and urban). First, a cluster analysis of the volumetric water balance data identified a small set of clusters having similar magnitudes and proportions of water supply sources and water use—some of them composed of only a few DAUCOs but accounting for a disproportionate amount of the state’s water use. Second, a principal components analysis identified leading modes of anomalous water supply and water use among the 475 DAUCOs, capturing most of the time variation during 2002 to 2016. The most prominent mode exhibits a multi-year trend, most strongly involving increasing groundwater supply and agricultural water use, and decreasing urban water use and imported water supply. Over the study period, trends in both supply and use were pronounced, but differed considerably across California DAUCOs. One predominant subset of DAUCOs grew their agricultural water use with increased groundwater supply; in contrast to a widespread group of DAUCOs which reduced their urban water use. An important result for planners is our finding that variation in precipitation—itself important—is amplified by the human response to water supply availability and regulatory policy.
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加利福尼亚州供水和用水的空间模式
对 2002 年至 2016 年期间加利福尼亚州 475 个县级详细分析单位(DAUCOs)空间单元的供水和用水的空间和时间模式进行了分析,以评估降水变化对水平衡的影响。与全州降水量相比,许多 DAUCOs 的总供水量变异性相对较低。这种低变异性是根据需要在不同供水来源之间切换以维持可靠的总供水量的结果。我们采用多种方法来探索这些变化,其中涉及四类供水(本地、地下水、进口和其他)和两类用水(农业和城市)。首先,对水量平衡数据进行聚类分析,确定了一小部分供水水源和用水量及比例相似的聚类--其中一些聚类仅由几个DAUCO组成,但用水量却占全州用水量的很大比例。其次,通过主成分分析确定了 475 个 DAUCO 中异常供水和用水的主要模式,捕捉到了 2002 年至 2016 年期间的大部分时间变化。最突出的模式呈现出多年趋势,主要涉及地下水供应和农业用水的增加,以及城市用水和进口水供应的减少。在研究期间,供水和用水的趋势都很明显,但加州各地区用水户委员会之间的差异很大。一个主要的DAUCO子集随着地下水供应量的增加而增加了农业用水量;与此形成鲜明对比的是一个广泛的DAUCO群体减少了城市用水量。对于规划者来说,一个重要的结果是我们发现降水量的变化本身很重要,但人类对供水可用性和监管政策的反应放大了降水量的变化。
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来源期刊
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Environmental Science-Water Science and Technology
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
24 weeks
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