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Week 3: Hydrology concepts & Anthropocentric Impacts on Water Quantity and Timing

Week 3: Hydrology concepts & Anthropocentric Impacts on Water Quantity and Timing. For UNM Community and Regional Planning, CRP527 Presenter/instructor: Rich Schrader Week 3. How much water will this watershed produce?. How much yield depends on watershed context. Elevation Aridity of area

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Week 3: Hydrology concepts & Anthropocentric Impacts on Water Quantity and Timing

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  1. Week 3: Hydrology concepts & Anthropocentric Impacts on Water Quantity and Timing For UNM Community and Regional Planning, CRP527 Presenter/instructor: Rich Schrader Week 3

  2. How much water will this watershed produce? by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  3. How much yield depends on watershed context • Elevation • Aridity of area • Macroscopic Dynamics • like ENSO • Vegetation types & cover • Aspect (north, south particularly) of slopes by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  4. Water Yield Factors • Groundwater and surface water interactions • bedrock geology • groundwater hydrology factors • soil salinity • bank storage in the alluvium • Microclimatic aspects • Cropping patterns (types, timing) • Water conservation (both urban and rural approaches) by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  5. Macroscopic Dynamics & Indicators : ENSO http://www.cdc.noaa.gov/ENSO/enso.mei_index.html by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  6. ENSO over the past 65 years by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  7. Factors for ET • Capillary action of soil and plants • Shading of soil • Sublimation of snow/rain in canopy • Soil salinity & drainage • Reservoir storage issues by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  8. Current water data for NM • John D’Antonio, NM State Engineers said 2/1/06 that this drought (starting this fall) is 5th worse in over 100 record. • NM is way behind in its capacity to deliver water to Texas on Pecos River. Need to purchase 12,000 acre feet this year to meet court settlement. • Water settlements (Aamodt, Taos and Navajo/San Juan River) will cost millions. The Taos and Pojoaque basin settlements will cost about $20 each for the state of NM. Nationwide data: http://www.nal.usda.gov/wqic/index.shtml for the new website of Water Quality Information Center (WQIC) of USDA. by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  9. UNM STUDIES OF ET OF WATER USED BY TREES IN THE MIDDLE RIO GRANDE (Dahm, Cleverly, etal.) http://bosque.unm.edu/~cleverly/ • Uses micrometeorological methods such as Leaf Area Index (LAI). Uses a camera shooting up through the canopy which is corrected with aerial photography. • Indicates monthly time scale change as a result of leaf area. Groundwater levels change with a different time scale (diurnally with ET of trees & seasonally with irrigation season) • Uses a 3-dimensional sonic anemometer which measures wind speed in three dimensions and temperature (by measuring speed of sound which is a direct function of temperature). by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  10. Landscape setting • Look at topographic map of state of New Mexico to evaluate different conditions • Where are the big cities? • Where are active agricultural areas? • Where are the larger watershed boundaries and historic and current efforts for inter-basin transfers? by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  11. Policy Issues and Questions • Rio Grande Compact and the precedent of “Area of Origin” policies • Water use efficiency • Water economics • Water culture • Bioregional equity question with new technology (“cloud seeding”) and oil/water dependency by River Source, UNM CRP 527

  12. Remember good principles • “Do no harm” – The Precautionary Principle • Area of origin concerns and policy precedents • Free markets (deregulation) are tricky when a “public good” is concerned. Consider case study of privatization in Bolivia, Rajastan, and large US cities such as Stockton by River Source, UNM CRP 527

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