Impact of transient groundwater storage on the discharge of Himalayan rivers
Author(s) -
Christoff Andermann,
Laurent Longuevergne,
Stéphane Bonnet,
Alain Crave,
Philippe Davy,
Richard Gloaguen
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
nature geoscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.435
H-Index - 200
eISSN - 1752-0908
pISSN - 1752-0894
DOI - 10.1038/ngeo1356
Subject(s) - aquifer , groundwater , snow , precipitation , hydrology (agriculture) , glacier , groundwater recharge , discharge , water storage , geology , evapotranspiration , groundwater discharge , snowmelt , meltwater , water cycle , environmental science , residence time (fluid dynamics) , drainage basin , geomorphology , inlet , geography , ecology , geotechnical engineering , cartography , meteorology , biology
International audienceIn the course of the transfer of precipitation into rivers, water is temporarily stored in reservoirs with different residence times such as soils, groundwater, snow and glaciers. In the central Himalaya, the water budget is thought to be primarily controlled by monsoon rainfall, snow and glacier melt, and secondarily by evapotranspiration. An additional contribution from deep groundwater has been deduced from the chemistry of Himalayan rivers, but its importance in the annual water budget remains to be evaluated. Here we analyse records of daily precipitation and discharge within twelve catchments in Nepal over about 30 years. We observe annual hysteresis loops--that is, a time lag between precipitation and discharge--in both glaciated and unglaciated catchments and independent of the geological setting. We infer that water is stored temporarily in a reservoir with characteristic response time of about 45 days, suggesting a diffusivity typical of fractured basement aquifers. We estimate this transient storage capacity at about 28km3 for the three main Nepal catchments; snow and glacier melt contribute around 14km3yr-1, about 10% of the annual river discharge. We conclude that groundwater storage in a fractured basement influences significantly the Himalayan river discharge cycle
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