Climate's Impact on Groundwater Pollution Research
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Academic
University of Nebraska-Lincoln Researchers Will Investigate Climate's Impact on Groundwater Contamination from Chemicals Used in Crop and Animal Production
The team received a $600,000 Water Sustainability and Climate Program grant from a joint National Science Foundation-U.S. Department of Agriculture program that takes an interdisciplinary approach to understand and predict climate change-water system interactions. UNL's team includes faculty with expertise in engineering, economics, water science, and community and regional planning.
"We were surprised at how little information there is about how climate will impact groundwater quality," said project leaderShannon Bartelt-Hunt, UNL associate professor of civil engineering based at thePeter Kiewit Institutein Omaha. "Groundwater is used as a drinking water source and for irrigation so it's an important resource."
The team will study climate's direct and indirect effects on atrazine, a widely used crop herbicide, as well as the antibiotic sulfamethazine and artificial hormone estrone, both used in animal production. Atrazine is applied directly to fields, while the other two are applied through manures used as a fertilizer.
All three organic compounds can contaminate groundwater by mixing with rainwater as it percolates through the soil. The team will investigate how different climatic conditions affect the compounds' behavior and the characteristics of the infiltration process.
To study climate's indirect effects, they'll develop economic models to understand how predicted climate changes will affect land uses.
"We expect that climate change, in addition to directly affecting the environment, will also directly affect human behavior, in particular human decisions about land use," said UNL economistEric Thompson. "Those changes in human behavior will then also change water quality."
Researchers expect that decreasing water availability in the southern Plains will concentrate crop and animal production farther north, including in Nebraska, intensifying the use of these compounds. This ultimately could hurt groundwater quality.
"We hypothesis that those land use changes will have a greater impact than any direct effects of climate," Bartelt-Hunt said. "Hopefully, at the end, we'll have information specific to Nebraska, but we'll also have a model linking economic and hydrological components that can be used to evaluate climate and land use changes on subsurface hydrology in other geographic areas."
Source: University of Nebraska
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