4.7 Article

Localizing Hydrological Drought Early Warning Using In Situ Groundwater Sensors

Journal

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH
Volume 58, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022WR032165

Keywords

hydrological drought; drought early warning; Somaliland; drought exposure; groundwater model; groundwater monitoring

Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council [NE/S007415/1]
  2. Concern Worldwide UK
  3. UK AID (FCDO)
  4. Building Resilient Communities in Somalia (BRCiS) consortium
  5. Imperial College London's Grantham Institute

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In arid regions, satellite-based indicators are commonly used to infer drought conditions due to the lack of in situ monitoring facilities. However, by monitoring groundwater levels on the ground and comparing the data with satellite indicators, more accurate estimations of water availability can be made. Short monitoring campaigns can further improve these estimations and have practical advantages in terms of implementation.
Drought early warning systems (DEWSs) aim to spatially monitor and forecast risk of water shortage to inform early, risk-mitigating interventions. However, due to the scarcity of in situ monitoring in groundwater-dependent arid zones, spatial drought exposure is inferred using maps of satellite-based indicators such as rainfall anomalies, soil moisture, and vegetation indices. On the local scale, these coarse-resolution proxy indicators provide a poor inference of groundwater availability. The improving affordability and technical capability of modern sensors significantly increases the feasibility of taking direct groundwater level measurements in data-scarce, arid regions on a larger scale. Here, we assess the potential of in situ monitoring to provide a localized index of hydrological drought in Somaliland. We find that calibrating a lumped groundwater model with a short time series of groundwater level observations substantially improves the quantification of local water availability when compared to satellite-based indices. By varying the calibration length, we find that a 5-week period capturing both wet and dry season conditions provides most of the calibration capacity. This suggests that short monitoring campaigns are suitable for improving estimations of local water availabilities during drought. Short calibration periods have practical advantages, as the relocation of sensors enables rapid characterization of a large number of wells. These well simulations can supplement continuous in situ monitoring of strategic point sources to setup large-scale monitoring systems with contextualized and localized information on water availability. This information can be used as early warning evidence for the financing and targeting of early actions to mitigate impacts of hydrological drought.

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