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GSFLOW model simulations used to evaluate the impact of irrigated agriculture on surface water - groundwater interaction
Watershed-scale coupled surface water (SW) – groundwater (GW) flow modeling was
used to examine changes in streamflow and SW – GW interaction resulting from
irrigation and associated SW diversions and GW pumping. The U.S. Geological Survey
(USGS) model GSFLOW, an integration of the USGS Precipitation-Runoff Modeling
System (PRMS) and the Modular Ground-Water Flow Model (MODFLOW), was utilized
for this effort. Processes represented in the model include daily rain, snowfall, snowmelt,
streamflow, surface runoff, interflow, infiltration, soil-zone evapotranspiration (ET), and
subsurface unsaturated and saturated GW flow and ET. The upper Smith River watershed,
an important agricultural and recreational fishing area in west-central Montana, was used
to develop the model framework including watershed climate, topography, hydrography,
vegetation, and soil properties as well as the scenario used to represent current irrigation
practices. The 640 square kilometer modeled watershed area ranged in elevation from
1476 m to 2570 m and was discretized into coincident 200 m by 200 m hydrologic response
units (for climate and soil zone flow processes) and grid blocks (for unsaturated zone and
GW flow processes) resulting in a grid of 180 rows by 160 columns. The subsurface GW
system was discretized into 6 layers (two 50-m thick layers overlying five 100-m thick layers)
representing Quaternary alluvium, Tertiary sedimentary rock and bedrock with maximum
thicknesses of 50 m, 200 m and 500 m, respectively. The time period from 10/1/2004 to
10/1/2010 was simulated using 2192 daily stress periods. Observed daily temperature
maximum, minimum and precipitation records at the White Sulphur Springs 2 weather
station were used with temperature and precipitation lapse rates to distribute elevation-dependent
temperature and precipitation across the watershed. Initial estimates of parameters controlling
soil zone storage, infiltration from the soil zone to GW, and interflow were related to watershed
properties such as land-surface slope and soil properties. Potential ET was calculated in
GSFLOW using the Jensen-Haise approach. The model ET extinction depth was based on
the watershed vegetation distribution, assuming alfalfa was planted in sprinkler irrigated areas,
and literature plant root depths. Subsurface saturated and unsaturated zone properties were
related to the hydrogeologic units (i.e. alluvium, Tertiary sedimentary rock and bedrock). The
stream channel network was constructed by using the Arc Hydro flow accumulation tool and
selecting the network of stream segments with flow accumulating from at least 20 km2
(500 grid blocks). Each stream segment of the model was assigned a 12-m wide cross-section
that allowed stream width and depth to vary with flow. Model parameters were adjusted to
reproduce the general observed streamflow patterns and GW level distributions in the watershed.
Model results were used to compare streamflow, GW recharge and SW-GW exchange in the
watershed under natural, pre-irrigation conditions (PreIrr scenario); for current irrigation practices
involving mainly SW diversion with flood and sprinkler irrigation (IrrCurrent scenario); and for an
irrigation scenario based solely on GW pumping for sprinkler irrigation (IrrGW scenario).
Complete Metadata
| @id | http://datainventory.doi.gov/id/dataset/6e5b1b40a4fb2a5ce03dab22f7e10dc9 |
|---|---|
| bureauCode |
[ "010:12" ] |
| identifier | USGS:0f05cfe7-35da-4a7b-9449-5e9557f0a0a9 |
| spatial | -111.1591,46.2752,-110.7504,46.5941 |
| theme |
[ "geospatial" ] |