Modelling the effects of climate change and its uncertainty on UK chalk groundwater resources from an ensemble of global climate model projections
journal contribution
posted on 2016-07-27, 10:38authored byChristopher R. Jackson, Rakia Meister, Christel Prudhomme
Projections of climate for the 2080s from an ensemble of global climate models (GCMs) run under a medium-high (A2) emissions scenario are used to simulate changes in groundwater resources of a Chalk aquifer in central-southern England. Few studies that have investigated the impacts of climate change on groundwater resources have addressed uncertainty. In this paper the uncertainty associated with use of a suite of GCM outputs in catchment scale impact studies is quantified. A range of predictions is obtained by applying precipitation and temperature change factors, derived from thirteen GCMs, to a distributed recharge model and a groundwater flow model of the Chalk aquifer of the Marlborough and Berkshire Downs and south-west Chilterns in the UK. The ensemble average suggests there will be a 4.9% reduction in annual potential groundwater recharge across the study area, although this is not statistically significant at the 95% confidence level. The spread of results for simulated changes in annual potential groundwater recharge range from a 26% decrease to a 31% increase by the 2080s, with ten predicting a decrease and three an increase. Whilst annual recharge is not found to change significantly, the multi-model results suggest that the seasonal variation in the groundwater resource will be greater, with higher recharge rates during a reduced period of time in winter. The spread of predictions for changes in river baseflow, at the bottom of the largest river sub-catchment, is from -16 to +33% in March and from -68 to -56% in October. The effects of climate change are shown to depend significantly on the type of land-use. It is concluded that further research is required to quantify the effect of different vegetation types on Chalk covered by different thicknesses of soil and their response to a changing climate.
Funding
This work was funded by NERC-BGS and NERC-CEH core science
budget.
History
School
Social Sciences
Department
Geography and Environment
Published in
Journal of Hydrology
Volume
399
Issue
1-2
Pages
12 - 28
Citation
JACKSON, C., MEISTER, R. and PRUDHOMME, C., 2011. Modelling the effects of climate change and its uncertainty on UK chalk groundwater resources from an ensemble of global climate model projections. Journal of Hydrology, DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2010.12.028.
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