U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown Science Center, 11649 Leetown Rd., Kearneysville, WV 25430, USA.
U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown Science Center, 11649 Leetown Rd., Kearneysville, WV 25430, USA.
Sci Total Environ. 2018 Jan 1;610-611:154-166. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.07.247. Epub 2017 Aug 10.
The development of unconventional oil and gas (UOG) involves infrastructure development (well pads, roads and pipelines), well drilling and stimulation (hydraulic fracturing), and production; all of which have the potential to affect stream ecosystems. Here, we developed a fine-scaled (1:24,000) catchment-level disturbance intensity index (DII) that included 17 measures of UOG capturing all steps in the development process (infrastructure, water withdrawals, probabilistic spills) that could affect headwater streams (<200km in upstream catchment) in the Upper Susquehanna River Basin in Pennsylvania, U.S.A. The DII ranged from 0 (no UOG disturbance) to 100 (the catchment with the highest UOG disturbance in the study area) and it was most sensitive to removal of pipeline cover, road cover and well pad cover metrics. We related this DII to three measures of high quality streams: Pennsylvania State Exceptional Value (EV) streams, Class A brook trout streams and Eastern Brook Trout Joint Venture brook trout patches. Overall only 3.8% of all catchments and 2.7% of EV stream length, 1.9% of Class A streams and 1.2% of patches were classified as having medium to high level DII scores (>50). Well density, often used as a proxy for development, only correlated strongly with well pad coverage and produced materials, and therefore may miss potential effects associated with roads and pipelines, water withdrawals and spills. When analyzed with a future development scenario, 91.1% of EV stream length, 68.7% of Class A streams and 80.0% of patches were in catchments with a moderate to high probability of development. Our method incorporated the cumulative effects of UOG on streams and can be used to identify catchments and reaches at risk to existing stressors or future development.
非常规油气(UOG)的开发涉及基础设施建设(井场、道路和管道)、钻井和增产(水力压裂)以及生产等环节,所有这些都有可能对溪流生态系统造成影响。在这里,我们开发了一种精细尺度(1:24000)的流域干扰强度指数(DII),其中包含了 17 项 UOG 措施,涵盖了开发过程的所有步骤(基础设施、取水量、概率性泄漏),这些措施可能会影响美国宾夕法尼亚州上萨斯奎哈纳河流域(<200km 的上游流域)的源头溪流。DII 的范围从 0(无 UOG 干扰)到 100(研究区域内受 UOG 干扰最大的流域),对去除管道覆盖物、道路覆盖物和井场覆盖物等指标最为敏感。我们将该 DII 与三条高质量溪流的指标进行了关联:宾夕法尼亚州特殊价值(EV)溪流、A 级鳟鱼溪流和东部鳟鱼联合鳟鱼斑块。总体而言,只有 3.8%的流域和 2.7%的 EV 溪流长度、1.9%的 A 级溪流和 1.2%的斑块被归类为具有中高水平 DII 分数(>50)。通常用作开发代理的井密度仅与井场覆盖物和生产材料密切相关,因此可能会错过与道路和管道、取水量和泄漏相关的潜在影响。在未来发展情景下进行分析时,91.1%的 EV 溪流长度、68.7%的 A 级溪流和 80.0%的斑块位于中度到高度发展概率的流域中。我们的方法综合考虑了 UOG 对溪流的累积影响,可用于识别面临现有压力或未来开发风险的流域和河段。