Strategy for developing GIS-based tools for management of the effects on groundwater of nitrate leaching from agricultural land use
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Date
2005
Type
Conference Contribution - published
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Fields of Research
Abstract
The end user requirement for this development is
to be able to assess the impact of land use changes
on groundwater quality, specifically that due to
nitrate leaching from agriculture. Implementation
will be for alluvial plains at scales up to about
2000 km². GIS databases provide information on
land use and soils. This information, at individual
field and farm scale, enables modelling of nitrate
leaching by the companion FarmSim model that is
run on a daily time basis in response to climate,
soils, crop, and farm management options. The
output leaching data are in the form of mean
annual drainage and an associated value of
average concentration. Upscaling of farm-scale
nitrate leaching to the effects on groundwater
quality is achieved by use of a steady-state,
groundwater flow and contaminant transport
models (AquiferSim). A 2-D horizontal
groundwater flow model provides a piezometric
surface along which land use changes and
affected groundwater zones can be related by
means of gradient searches that locate principal
directions of groundwater flow. Along these
principal directions, the horizontal and vertical
dispersive transport of nitrate can be assessed
within a 2-D vertical, steady-state, groundwater
flow model based on stream function analysis. The
stream function model allows simulation of steadystate
contaminant transport for complex land use
patterns and spatially varying aquifer properties, in
the form of a mixing-cell model based on the
computational grid. The cell size of this model is
set to control numerical dispersion, as a surrogate
for dispersion in the aquifer, caused by the
horizontal and vertical components of the
groundwater flux. The resulting distribution of
nitrate concentration with depth in the aquifer can
thus be determined for any location in relation to
the upstream land uses. The transport model also
simulates groundwater age, which is treated as a
solute undergoing first-order growth. Spatial
distribution of groundwater age and steady-state
nitrate concentration addresses some of the end user
questions that usually require a transient transport
model. The groundwater models have been
developed as prototypes with Microsoft Excel.
These proven computational methods will be
incorporated into an application to run on the
Microsoft .NET framework. This application is
being used as the software architecture that
connects GIS databases, nitrogen leaching models,
vadose zone and groundwater transport models, to
user interfaces and information output displays.
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Copyright © The Authors. The responsibility for the contents of this paper rests upon the authors and not on the Modelling and Simulation Society of Australia and New Zealand Inc.