Management of Saltwater Intrusion in Data-scarce Coastal Aquifers: Impacts of Seasonality, Water Deficit, and Land Use

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Springer Science and Business Media B.V.

Abstract

Coastal aquifers are vulnerable to saltwater intrusion (SWI) due to several drivers particularly increased water demand and groundwater overexploitation associated with population growth, reduced groundwater recharge, and lately climate change. This study examines the status of SWI in four data scarce coastal aquifers located along the Eastern Mediterranean by assessing how water cycle seasonality, water deficits, and changes in land use and land cover (LULC) have contributed to increased salinity. A framework that combines field monitoring with hydro-geochemical techniques, as well as multivariate and inferential statistical analysis was used to identify the main SWI drivers at play at each aquifer. The overall assessment showed that all four pilot areas exhibited signs of salinization with different severities. The current state of the aquifers ranged from slightly saline (TDS < 1500 ppm) to highly saline (15,000 < TDS < 31,000 ppm). While the level of the SWI was significantly correlated to the dominant land uses at each site, the extent of the water deficit played a dominant role in explaining the occurrence and intensity of observed SWI rates. The findings suggest a synergistic effect between increased water deficits and urbanization and SWI. Site specific measures are discussed for mitigating the impacts of land use, water demand and deficit towards the sustainable management of the groundwater aquifers. © 2021, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.

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Eastern mediterranean, Land use land cover, Saltwater intrusion, Seasonality, Mediterranean region, Aquifers, Climate change, Groundwater resources, Hydrogeology, Population statistics, Recharging (underground waters), Salt water intrusion, Coastal aquifers, Ground water recharge, Groundwater overexploitation, Land use/land cover, Population growth, Water deficits, Water demand, Coastal aquifer, Groundwater resource, Land use change, Land use planning, Saline intrusion, Urbanization, Land use

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