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Data and Code release: Lagged impacts of groundwater pumping on streamflow due to stream drying: Incorporation into analytical streamflow depletion estimation methods
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| Created: | Jun 18, 2025 at 2 p.m. (UTC) | |
| Last updated: | Jun 18, 2025 at 2:39 p.m. (UTC) | |
| Citation: | See how to cite this resource |
| Sharing Status: | Public |
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Abstract
This is the data and code release for the manuscript "Lagged impacts of groundwater pumping on streamflow due to stream drying: Incorporation into analytical streamflow depletion estimation methods" by Sam Zipper et al, currently in review.
Abstract of manuscript: Water management often requires accounting for reductions in streamflow caused by groundwater pumping (‘streamflow depletion’). Since streamflow depletion cannot be quantified from observational data, it is typically modeled. Analytical depletion functions (ADFs) are a low-cost, low-complexity approach for estimating streamflow depletion with utility for decision support, but ADFs adopt several simplifying assumptions, including an infinite supply of water within the stream. Here, we develop an approach to incorporate stream drying into ADFs to improve their estimation of streamflow and streamflow depletion. Using Scott Valley (California) as an example, we compare ADF results to observed streamflow data and the Scott Valley Integrated Hydrologic Model (SVIHM), a process-based numerical model of the domain. ADFs incorporating stream drying simulate strong agreement with observed streamflow and SVIHM results. Critically, ADFs with drying can simulate a temporal shift in streamflow depletion that occurs when summer stream drying causes stream network disconnections and a substantial fraction of streamflow depletion is lagged until the fall/winter, when the stream network rewets. Estimates of what streamflow would have been without groundwater pumping are required to incorporate stream drying into ADFs, and we evaluate the ability of a statewide statistical model of unimpaired monthly streamflow (the California Natural Flows Database [CNFD]) to meet this need. ADFs using CNFD data simulate appropriate temporal dynamics but overestimate streamflow, suggesting that regional unimpaired flow estimates combined with local bias-correction could provide a mechanism to apply ADFs in watersheds without local numerical models.
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Funding Agencies
This resource was created using funding from the following sources:
| Agency Name | Award Title | Award Number |
|---|---|---|
| The Nature Conservancy | 10192023-16680 | |
| The Nature Conservancy | 06132024-17291 |
Contributors
People or Organizations that contributed technically, materially, financially, or provided general support for the creation of the resource's content but are not considered authors.
| Name | Organization | Address | Phone | Author Identifiers |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ian Gambill | Colorado School of Mines | CO, US | ||
| Monty Schmitt | The Nature Conservancy | |||
| Claire Kouba | Yale University | CA, US | ||
| Leland Scantlebury | University of California, Davis | |||
| Thomas Harter | Univ California Davis | |||
| Nicholas Murphy | The Nature Conservancy |
How to Cite
This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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