环境科学
蓄水
地下水
地表水
水资源
水资源管理
湿地
背景(考古学)
资源(消歧)
含水层
气候变化
雨水收集
节约用水
地理
环境工程
生态学
海洋学
地质学
考古
岩土工程
入口
生物
计算机科学
计算机网络
作者
Bridget R. Scanlon,Sarah Fakhreddine,Ashraf Rateb,Inge de Graaf,J. S. Famiglietti,Tom Gleeson,R. Quentin Grafton,Estéban G. Jobbágy,Seifu Kebede,Seshagiri Rao Kolusu,Leonard F. Konikow,Di Long,Mesfin M. Mekonnen,Hannes Müller Schmied,Abhijit Mukherjee,Alan MacDonald,R. C. Reedy,Mohammad Shamsudduha,Craig T. Simmons,Alex Sun,Richard G. Taylor,Karen G. Villholth,Charles J Vörösmarty,Chunmiao Zheng
标识
DOI:10.1038/s43017-022-00378-6
摘要
Water is a critical resource, but ensuring its availability faces challenges from climate extremes and human intervention. In this Review, we evaluate the current and historical evolution of water resources, considering surface water and groundwater as a single, interconnected resource. Total water storage trends have varied across regions over the past century. Satellite data from the Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) show declining, stable and rising trends in total water storage over the past two decades in various regions globally. Groundwater monitoring provides longer-term context over the past century, showing rising water storage in northwest India, central Pakistan and the northwest United States, and declining water storage in the US High Plains and Central Valley. Climate variability causes some changes in water storage, but human intervention, particularly irrigation, is a major driver. Water-resource resilience can be increased by diversifying management strategies. These approaches include green solutions, such as forest and wetland preservation, and grey solutions, such as increasing supplies (desalination, wastewater reuse), enhancing storage in surface reservoirs and depleted aquifers, and transporting water. A diverse portfolio of these solutions, in tandem with managing groundwater and surface water as a single resource, can address human and ecosystem needs while building a resilient water system. Water resources are threatened by human activities and climate variability. This Review discusses trends in water storage and availability and examines ways to enhance water-resource resilience through green and grey solutions.