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Groundwater for Ecosystems: Reliance, Resilience, and Threats From Groundwater Depletion and a Changing Climate
Dissertation   Open access

Groundwater for Ecosystems: Reliance, Resilience, and Threats From Groundwater Depletion and a Changing Climate

Melissa M. Rohde
Doctor of Philosophy (PHD), College of Environmental Science and Forestry
11/06/2023

Abstract

groundwater water management global California random forest Ecosystems

Groundwater is critical for many ecosystems, yet its role in supporting ecosystems is rarely acknowledged in global

conservation, climate, and sustainability goals. As groundwater depletion intensifies and spreads globally due to

climate change and high human water demands, it is imperative that groundwater-dependent ecosystems (GDEs) be

identified and considered in policy, programmatic, and management decisions. However, progress has been hindered

by significant data and ecohydrologic knowledge gaps. To advance the protection of GDEs globally, this dissertation

leverages publicly available datasets, and advancements in remote sensing, cloud computing, and machine learning

to evaluate ecosystem groundwater needs and map GDEs across global drylands. First, normalized difference

vegetation index (NDVI) derived from Sentinel-2 satellite imagery were coupled with field-based groundwater level

data to assess groundwater-dependent vegetation responses to groundwater depth differences across seasons and

streamflow regimes in California. A diminished reliance on groundwater for vegetation along anthropogenically

altered streams suggests that many riparian woodlands in California are subsidized by water management practices,

thus undermining their resilience to natural hydrologic variation. Second, NDVI data derived from Landsat satellite

imagery were standardized using Z-scores and used to identify groundwater thresholds corresponding to reductions

in vegetation greenness across a wide range of biomes and local conditions across California. While absolute

groundwater depths vary across locations and plant communities, our results showed that rooting depths for

dominant species inferred from vegetation maps can be used as threshold proxies for groundwater impact analyses.

Furthermore, potential drought refugia were mapped across California utilizing ZNDVI scores, which can help

practitioners to prioritize limited financial and natural resources to protect these critical habitats. Finally, GDEs were

mapped across global drylands by employing a Random Forest machine learning model along with publicly

available climate and satellite imagery data. Our map highlights the growing need to protect GDEs from the threat of

groundwater depletion. Overall, the cumulative findings from this dissertation provide critically needed technical

guidance for practitioners to identify and consider GDEs across various management scales globally so that global

conservation, climate, and sustainability goals can be achieved.

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Establishing ecological thresholds and targets for groundwater managementView
PDF https://doi.org/10.1038/s44221-024-00221-w Open CC BY V4.0
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Groundwater-dependent ecosystem map exposes global dryland protection needsView
PDF https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-024-07702-8 Open CC BY V4.0

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