4.7 Article

Scale invariance of water stress and scarcity indicators Facilitating cross-scale comparisons of water resources vulnerability

Journal

APPLIED GEOGRAPHY
Volume 31, Issue 1, Pages 321-328

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.apgeog.2010.07.003

Keywords

Multi scale analysis; Water resources vulnerability; Grid models; Falkenmark Index; Criticality ratio

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Several indicators are commonly used to measure the degree of water resources vulnerability (e g water stress, and scarcity) in different populations and regions Little is known however about how these indicators respond to changes in the scale of data used to derive them Two of the most widely used water resources vulnerability metrics conventionally computed for mean annual values at the country level are Falkenmark Index (FI) for per capita water availability and the Criticality Ratio (CR) for water use to availability This study computes FI and CR values at a wide range of scales and tests for trends with scale in three river basins Missouri (North America) Danube (Europe) and Ganges (South Asia) Basins Gridded sub-continental hydro-climatic data sets at 0 5 resolution are used and aggregated at multiple scales from 05 to 5 0 Analytical logic and empirical evidence show that mean grid-cell values of these vulnerability metrics are in fact scale-independent (scale-invariant) for a given basin When unscaled variables like water availability and use are ratioed to variables that depend on area such as population their dependency on scale may be lost and they become spatially scaled variables For example grid-cell mean values of water availability are scale dependent but grid-cell mean values of the ratio of water availability to population (i e II) are not This implies that for a particular river basin average water resources vulnerability computed by FI and CR at one scale should apply to all scales This has tremendous implications to applied geographic studies of water resources and is especially interesting since the unscaled variables used to derive the two indices are scale dependent and vary greatly with scale The paper and findings highlight the multi-scale complexities of water resources and the geographic nature of water resources and vulnerability metrics (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd All rights reserved

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