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Shift in groundwater recharge of the Bengal Basin from rainfall to surface water

Yusuf Jameel, Mason Stahl, Holly A. Michael, Benjamín C. Bostick, M. S. Steckler, Peter Schlösser, Alexander van Geen, Charles F. Harvey

2023Communications Earth & Environment24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Groundwater supports agriculture and provides domestic water for over 250 million people in the Bengal Basin. Here we investigate the source of groundwater recharge using over 2500 stable water isotope measurements from the region. We employ a Monte Carlo statistical analysis to find distributions of possible components of recharge by accounting for the variability of isotope ratios in each of the possible recharge sources. We find that groundwater recharge sources have shifted in the last decades with a ~50% increase in recharge from stagnant surface water bodies (mostly during the latter part of the dry season) and a relative decrease in contribution from direct infiltration of precipitation (which occurs mostly in the early monsoon). We attribute this shift to an increase in standing water in irrigated rice fields and ponds, and an increase in the downward hydraulic gradient during the dry season driven by pumping.

Topics & Concepts

Groundwater rechargeGroundwaterHydrology (agriculture)Depression-focused rechargeEnvironmental scienceSurface waterInfiltration (HVAC)MonsoonDry seasonStructural basinPrecipitationGeologyAquiferGeographyGeomorphologyClimatologyEnvironmental engineeringCartographyMeteorologyGeotechnical engineeringGroundwater and Isotope GeochemistryGroundwater and Watershed AnalysisArsenic contamination and mitigation
Shift in groundwater recharge of the Bengal Basin from rainfall to surface water | Litcius