Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Bren Hall, 2400, Santa Barbara, CA, United States; Goleta Water District, 4699 Hollister Ave, Santa Barbara, CA, United States.
Bren School of Environmental Science and Management, University of California, Bren Hall, 2400, Santa Barbara, CA, United States; Environmental Defense Fund, California Habitat Exchange & Western Water, 123 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA, United States.
Sci Total Environ. 2019 Jun 20;670:865-875. doi: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.03.197. Epub 2019 Mar 14.
As surface water becomes scarcer and precipitation more variable in a warmer climate, reliance on groundwater reserves for agricultural use is expected to increase. Where efforts to achieve sustainable groundwater management require reductions in aggregate extraction, some of these reductions will entail a decline in agricultural production. However, the degree to which water conservation and other environmental priorities conflict with agricultural production depends, in part, on the spatial configuration of land-use decisions. We explore how to spatially configure groundwater recharge projects to achieve groundwater recharge targets and preserve ecologically important habitat at the least cost. We conduct a field-level analysis for all fields in Kern County, California, the largest crop-producing county in California (and the United States). Results demonstrate that fields selected for cost-effective land retirement can achieve groundwater recharge targets and simultaneously contribute to biodiversity goals via endangered species habitat conservation. However, increasing the amount of habitat conserved raises costs significantly. We discuss conservation actions, economic incentives, and policies that can be leveraged to meet regional biodiversity goals while preserving the economic vitality of agricultural communities. More broadly, this work also provides a proof-of-concept for applying the conservation planning tool, Marxan, to promote efficient allocation of land uses in the face of increasing water resource scarcity and biodiversity threats.
在气候变暖的情况下,地表水变得更加稀缺,降水更加多变,预计农业对地下水储量的依赖将增加。在为实现地下水可持续管理而努力减少总开采量的情况下,其中一些减少将导致农业生产下降。然而,节约用水和其他环境优先事项与农业生产之间的冲突程度在一定程度上取决于土地利用决策的空间配置。我们探讨了如何在空间上配置地下水补给项目,以实现地下水补给目标,并以最低成本保护具有重要生态意义的生境。我们对加利福尼亚州克恩县(加利福尼亚州和美国最大的作物生产县)的所有农田进行了实地水平分析。结果表明,选择具有成本效益的土地休耕的农田可以实现地下水补给目标,并通过保护濒危物种栖息地来促进生物多样性目标。然而,增加保护的栖息地数量会显著增加成本。我们讨论了可以利用的保护行动、经济激励措施和政策,以在面对水资源短缺和生物多样性威胁不断增加的情况下,实现区域生物多样性目标,同时保持农业社区的经济活力。更广泛地说,这项工作还为应用保护规划工具 Marxan 提供了一个概念验证,以促进在水资源日益短缺和生物多样性受到威胁的情况下,土地利用的有效配置。