University of Massachusetts at Amherst
The first continent-wide, multi-factor analysis of climate and land cover effects on watersheds in the United States, published today, provides a broad new assessment of runoff, flooding and storm water management options for use by such professionals as land use and town planners and water quality managers.
Watershed scientist Timothy Randhir and his doctoral student
Paul Ekness in the department of environmental conservation at the University
of Massachusetts Amherst hope their new multivariate simulation and statistical
models at the watershed system level will give managers some practical ideas on
new incentives to get developers to include water quality, green infrastructure
and conservation plans in their projects.
They also want to encourage a new
awareness of the need for cities and towns to cooperate when considering new
development.
The study quantifies the connections between land use and climate, that is temperature and precipitation, to the runoff process and flooding in a watershed system at a larger scale than was available before. Details appear today in an early online edition of the Journal of Geophysical Research: Biogeosciences.
Randhir says this assessment of data from satellite imagery,
field stations, water flow observations, temperature and stream gauges over the
entire United States will generate new information about mechanisms and
processes and will lead to a better understanding of the runoff process in
large systems.
He adds, "We also want to highlight the importance of
natural systems such as forest cover and open space when a town is considering
new parking lots or shopping centers, for example. You can't just take away
such ecosystem services and expect everything to be OK. All towns now have a
big problem dealing with storm water, and with climate change it's going to get
worse. In the past, the problems just flowed away to become some other town's
problem, but that isn't going to work anymore."
The watershed researcher says he hopes a new approach to water
resource management will emerge so that towns and managers shift from dealing
with storm and runoff problems after the fact, to looking at preventive,
source-level solutions.
"There seems to be a better understanding now that water
flowing away from you doesn't just disappear, it affects someone else, and a
problem in the system above you will affect you. This kind of systems thinking
has to take over, and cooperation has to be used more often," Randhir
says.
His paper makes very specific recommendations on how to use such
tools as urban forestry or increasing infiltration to mitigate flooding. The
researchers ran models to quantify relationships between different land uses and
conditions including urban forestry, agriculture, stream networks, soil types,
temperature, precipitation and human interventions such as dams and parking
lots.
"We propose the increased use of green infrastructure and
best management practices to enhance the resilience of the watershed
system," Randhir says. For example, cities and towns should now offer
incentives for their own and private developments to change practices when
building facilities that increase impervious cover, for example a parking lot.
Plans should include practices like pervious pavement that lets rainwater seep
through and not run off, plus rain gardens or retention basins that capture
hot, dirty runoff from asphalt to capture sediments, oil, grease and heavy
metals.
Other incentives could reward private landowners and farmers for
mitigating runoff at the source and not just ignoring it, he adds. "Right
now this is not built into anyone's thinking, but we also suggest that cities
and towns move away from using only site-specific approaches that fix a local
problem and a shift toward a system-wide approach. We hope towns and cities can
use this information to change their land use practices."
This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture's
National Institute for Food and Agriculture.