LOS ANGELES
Mon Dec 14, 2009 10:04pm EST
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - California's two main river basins and
the aquifers beneath its agricultural heartland have lost nearly
enough water since 2003 to fill Lake Mead, America's
largest reservoir, new satellite data showed on Monday.
Depleted aquifers account for two-thirds of the loss measured,
most of it attributed to increased groundwater pumping for irrigation
of drought-parched farmland in California's fertile but arid Central
Valley, scientists said.
The findings have major implications for the economy as the
Central Valley is home to one-sixth
of all irrigated U.S. cropland, said Jay Famiglietti, a
hydrologist at the University of California,
Irvine, and member of the research team.
The Central Valley, stretching 500 miles from Bakersfield to
Redding, has traditionally produced over half the U.S. harvest of
fruits and vegetables. California as a whole ranks as the
nation's
No. 1 farm state in terms of crop value -- more than $36 billion
a year.
Central Valley farms have increasingly tapped into aquifers
during the past few years to help
offset drastic cuts in their regular allocations of irrigation
water pumped in by the state and federal government from farther
north.
How much water remains in California's aquifers is unknown, but
satellite studies show that groundwater is being used up faster than
nature can restore it.
"I don't think people realize how quickly groundwater is
being depleted," Famiglietti said. "It does point to the
fact that the pumping is occurring at an unsustainable rate."
Results of the satellite-imaging study, conducted by NASA and the
German space agency, were presented by researchers at the American
Geophysical Union meeting in San Francisco.
The data are based on subtle month-to-month fluctuations in the
Earth's gravitational field used to gauge changes in the presence of
groundwater, surface water, ice and precipitation.
The amount of water available in the state's two biggest river
basins, the Sacramento and the San Joaquin -- both of which drain
California's Sierra Nevada mountain range -- has diminished by more
than 30 cubic kilometers since late 2003, the study found.
That's nearly enough to fill Lake Mead on the Colorado River in
Nevada, a major water source for Nevada and southern California.
Two-thirds of that loss, the rough equivalent of 8 million
Olympic-sized pools, was groundwater.
The San Joaquin basin accounts for the bulk of the overall loss,
about 3.5 cubic kilometers of water a year, with more than 75 percent
of that total the result of groundwater pumping in the southern end of
the Central Valley, researchers said.
The California findings come months after another team of U.S.
hydrologists found groundwater levels in northwest India have declined
by nearly 18 cubic kilometers a year over the past decade, a loss due
almost entirely to pumping and the consumption of groundwater by
humans.