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  • Isotopic assessment of the impacts of climatic and hydrological changes on wetland-groundwater ecosystem interactions

    Closed for proposals

    Project Type

    Coordinated Research Project

    Project Code

    F33027

    CRP

    2311

    Approved Date

    9 September 2021

    Status

    Active - Ongoing

    Start Date

    19 January 2022

    Expected End Date

    1 April 2026

    Participating Countries

    Algeria
    Argentina
    Brazil
    Chad
    Costa Rica
    France
    Greece
    India
    Malaysia
    Namibia
    South Africa
    Spain
    Tunisia

    Description

    Groundwater systems act as a buffer against climate variability when surface water systems are low. However, replenishment of the groundwater system via recharge is being impacted not just by climate change but also by variable groundwater management practices and land use changes. Visualisation of these impacts on groundwater is difficult, driving assumptions that the resource is more resilient than it is. In contrast to groundwater systems, wetlands provide strong visualisation of how water resources are impacted by both natural and anthropogenic processes. Wetlands and groundwater systems are not independent entities though since connectivity between them is essential to maintaining the quality and quantity of water in both. Understanding this connectivity is critical for the long-term protection of wetlands as well as sustainability of groundwater systems. Local authorities and decision makers can see the impacts on wetlands but to understand how these impacts flow to the groundwater system requires a quantitative assessment of hydrological fluxes and processes in wetlands. These include identifying water sources and sinks, intra-wetland flow paths, evaporation processes, and water residence time. Environmental stable and radioactive isotopes, together with conventional hydrogeological tools (remote sensing, GIS, pumping tests, geophysical tools and hydrochemistry), provide unique information on origins, interactions, and transit times that are key to better understanding hydrological processes and fluxes in these changing environments. The CRP will evaluate the impact of hydrological change, driven by land use changes and climate change, in wetland areas on the quantity of groundwater linked to the wetland systems. As wetlands provide an important buffer against the impacts of both drought and floods, understanding their functional relationship to the linked groundwater system is thus an important requirement for mitigation of the future impacts of climate change. The CRP will provide guidelines on how to use both stable and radioactive isotopes to assess groundwater resources through the lens of wetland systems in Member States.

    Objectives

    To improve capability and expertise among Member States in the use of environmental isotopes to assess the impacts of climate and land use change on groundwater resources feeding wetland areas.

    Specific objectives

    To assess and improve the suite of isotopes and other hydrochemical tracers to determine the sources, interactions and flow paths of groundwater systems sustaining major types of wetlands.

    To assess and improve the interpretation of hydrological processes, sources, interactions and pathways in groundwater systems and linked wetlands.

    To develop best practice guidelines on integrating environmental isotopes and other indicators into assessment of hydrological processes for efficient water resources management in groundwater systems and dependent wetlands.

    To assess and improve the suite of isotopes and other hydrochemical tracers to determine the sources, interactions and flow paths of groundwater systems sustaining major types of wetlands.

    To assess and improve the interpretation of hydrological processes, sources, interactions and pathways in groundwater systems and linked wetlands.

    To develop best practice guidelines on integrating environmental isotopes and other indicators into assessment of hydrological processes for efficient water resources management in groundwater systems and dependent wetlands.

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