4.6 Article

Combined influences of irrigation diversions and associated subsurface return flows on river temperature in a semi-arid region

Journal

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES
Volume 35, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hyp.14283

Keywords

aquatic ecosystems; canals; depletion; irrigation; lateral inflows; return flows; stream temperature; summer baseflow; thermal imagery; thermal refugia

Funding

  1. United States Geological Survey [2019UT257B]
  2. Utah Water Research Laboratory

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Irrigation activities impact water distribution and ecosystems in arid regions. Lateral inflows play a key role in maintaining stream temperature and environmental conditions.
Irrigation activities alter water distribution and storage in arid and semi-arid regions worldwide. The removal of water from streams can drastically impact instream flows. However, irrigation water conveyance and application onto fields can create surface and subsurface hydrologic connections, or lateral inflows, that return some of this diverted water back to streams. Prior research has shown the impact of surface water diversions from streams on downstream warming that increases stress on aquatic species. However, the combined effects of flow depletion and irrigation-enhanced lateral inflows on stream temperature and river ecosystems remains poorly studied. To further understand these relationships, we combined intensive field monitoring over three irrigation seasons and thermal aerial imagery to identify irrigation-enhanced subsurface lateral inflow locations and evaluate their effects on stream flow and temperature patterns over a 2.5-km highly depleted study reach. Considering variable hydrology, weather, flow diversions, channel geometry and lateral inflows, we found irrigation-enhanced lateral inflows were the likely explanation for buffered longitudinal and diel warming patterns that prevented stressful or lethal thermal conditions for brown trout. These localized temperature effects were more pronounced in drier years, under high diversion rates and during high solar radiation intensity. We also found that lateral inflows corresponded with greater spatial variability of stream temperatures and potential thermal refugia. Study results illustrate the potential ecological consequences of reducing irrigation-enhanced lateral inflows and highlight the importance of hydrologic monitoring in irrigated arid river valleys. The role and preservation of these lateral inflows should be considered in water resources management related to irrigation efficiency and environmental flows.

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