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Idaho Water Resources Research Institute
Idaho Water Issues Background and Science Focus: Snake River Plain Aquifer Dr. Gary S. Johnson Dr. Donna M. Cosgrove Mr. Bryce A. Contor Dr. John Tracy Idaho Water Resources Research Institute University of Idaho
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Topics for today Hydrology Basics Conjunctive Management Challenges
Snake Plain Example Aquifer Management Opportunities
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The aquifer is a large, leaky tank
recharge varies dramatically Aquifer Springs Output is more constant Characteristics: Flow Recharge and Discharge Water Budget Storage
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Aquifer Flow
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Aquifer Flow
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Aquifer Recharge Water entering the aquifer is called Recharge
Common sources of recharge: Infiltrating precipitation River or lake-bed seepage Subsurface inflows from nearby aquifers Seepage from human activities Storm drains Irrigation
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Aquifer Discharge Water leaving the aquifer is called Discharge
Common sources of discharge: Spring discharge Seepage to rivers or lakes Wetlands Subsurface outflows to adjacent aquifers Ground-water pumping Note that rivers can be a source of recharge or discharge
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Water Budget Since we cannot create or destroy water, a basic law exists Inflow = Outflow +/- Change in Storage It is like a bank account, if we spend more money than we make, our account balance goes down Aquifer
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Aquifer Storage Aquifer storage is the volume of water stored in the aquifer We can detect increases in aquifer storage by rising aquifer water levels Changes in storage impact connected surface water Long term decreases in storage indicate aquifer mining
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Well Water Levels Seasonal Variation Long-term Change
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River/Aquifer Interconnection
A gaining river or lake is said to be ‘hydraulically connected’ Springs and seeps discharge to rivers and lakes The gain is not at a constant rate As aquifer elevation rises, the gain increases As aquifer elevation declines, the gain decreases If aquifer elevation is well below river elevation, river is a ‘losing’ reach
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Conceptual Aquifer System
Recharge Pumping Discharge to River BASIC TRUTH: A gallon taken out of the aquifer represents a gallon that never makes it to the river ISSUE: When, where depletion effects are felt
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Conjunctive Management
Conjunctive Management is the simultaneous management of the surface-water resource and the interconnected ground-water resource Not all aquifers are interconnected with rivers or lakes The Snake Plain Aquifer is intimately interconnected with the river
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Why is Conjunctive Management So Difficult?
Water Law originally intended to manage surface water Effects are immediate, visible and down-stream only With ground-water, the effects exist but are more difficult to identify Effects are spatially distributed Effects are spread out over time
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COMPLICATION NO. 1
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COMPLICATION NO. 2: TIME ATTENUATED IMPACTS
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How do we sort this out? Ground-water model can predict the timing and location of impacts Identify arrival time of impacts Identify arrival locations Ground-water model is a numerical representation of a physical system Example: Snake Plain Aquifer Model
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Some Snake Plain Background
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Major Sources of Recharge and
Precipitation Tributary Underflow Evapotranspiration Surface Irrigation Spring Discharge Major Sources of Recharge and 1
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Snake Plain Aquifer Water Budget
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Water Budget on Snake Plain
Approximately 6.5 million acre-feet (8,000 cfs) of water recharges the aquifer annually Discharge to Thousand Springs reach is 5,000 to 6,000 cfs Discharge to American Falls reach is 2,500 to 3,000 cfs We are actually water-rich
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History of Irrigation on Snake Plain
Surface water irrigation started around 1890s Water table rose 10s to 100s of feet New springs emerged Earliest claims on spring flow in Thousand Springs started around 1920s Ground-water pumping introduced in 1950s Rural electrification Deep pump technology
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Water levels on Plain peaked in 1950s Primarily declining since then
Impacts of ground-water pumping Conversion from flood irrigation to more efficient sprinkler systems Enlargement of irrigated areas Drought The aquifer seems to be very responsive to drought
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Changes in diversions/time
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Changes in Ground Water Irrigated Acres Over Time
1 million acres ~ 2 MAF/yr or 2,700 cfs
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Model is Translation of Physical System to Numerical Model Representation
Hydrologic Properties Aquifer Properties Boundaries Recharge/ Discharge Starting Conditions Model Ending Water Levels Spring Discharge River Gains and Losses
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Snake Plain Model Enhancement
Completed over past four years Appropriation from state, contribution from Idaho Power, in-kind from USGS Collaborative process Multi-agency Consultants for water users Model calibrated to 22 years of data, with 15,000 measured data points
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Steady State Water Table
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Comparison of Modeled to Measured Aquifer Water Levels
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Future Snake Plain Challenges
Continued changes in irrigation practices Canal lining Continued conversion to sprinkler irrigation Land use changing Subdivisions taking over agricultural land Industry moving in Dairies moving in Societal desires changing Species protection Potential for impacts of climate changes
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Is this just an Eastern Idaho Problem?
Snake Plain may be ahead of other basins in facing these challenges How we sort out the problems in the Snake Plain will have far-reaching impacts throughout the state Bear River Drainage Spokane Valley/Rathdrum Prairie Aquifer Treasure Valley Aquifer
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Toolbox for Aquifer Management
Managed Recharge Aquifer storage of excess spring run-off in high water years Conservation Reserve Program Taking acres out of production Ground-water Banking Conversion of some ground-water irrigation back to surface irrigation
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Toolbox for Aquifer Management (cont’d)
Partial or full curtailment of use during low water years Buy-out of some threatened water rights
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Summary Spring discharge and aquifer water levels are changing in response to: Man-induced effects: pumping and recharge Weather variability Demands exceed supplies Some technical tools available to minimize conflict State in the position of balancing priorities Protection of Senior Rights Full Economic Use
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More information? Gary S. Johnson Donna M. Cosgrove Bryce A. Contor
Idaho Water Resources Research Institute University of Idaho Donna M. Cosgrove Bryce A. Contor
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