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The study will: 1) improve the integration of state water-use and water supply data; 2) develop a basin-wide surface-water hydrologic model capable of evaluating the impacts of land-use change, climate change, and changes in water demand; and 3) develop a scientific approach to defining relations between streamflow processes and the responses of aquatic organisms in tributary streams.
The Mississippi Alluvial Plain (MAP) has become one of the most important agricultural regions in the US, and it relies heavily on a groundwater system that is poorly understood and shows signs of substantial change. The heavy use of the available groundwater resources has resulted in substantial groundwater-level declines and reductions in baseflow in streams within the MAP. These impacts are limiting well production and threatening future water availability for the region. On average it is estimated that over 9 billion gallons per day of groundwater are withdrawn for irrigation, supporting agricultural production. Agricultural interests in the region are aware of the economic and environmental costs that may come...
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A major component of the Water Census is the National Water Census Data Platform, which enables integration and delivery of water budget information alongside other data of interest to managers, such as water use data or ecological assessment criteria. Eventually, end users of water budget data (i.e. management agencies and decision-makers) will be able to access an integrated system of online databases in a form that will enable them to construct local and regional water budgets.
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The Red River Basin of New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana was chosen as a focus area study (FAS) as part of the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water Census (NWC). The objective of the NWC is to place technical information and tools in the hands of stakeholders so that they can make decisions on water availability. With this set objective, the USGS Water Science Centers in New Mexico, Oklahoma, Texas, Arkansas, and Louisiana conducted a study of water use and availability for the Red River Basin to improve water withdrawal estimates and investigate trends in water resources under future climate conditions and increased water withdrawals using groundwater and surface-water models (MODFLOW...
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The Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint (ACF) Basin in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia has ongoing conflict over water use and availability. To address this issue, the USGS is conducting a three-year study to estimate water use, model surface and groundwater flow, and develop ecological flow relations.
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This study sought to better quantify selected components of the water budget in the Colorado River Basin to assist in the assessment of water availability for the region.
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In 2014, the Upper Rio Grande Basin (URGB) of Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, and northern Mexico was chosen as a focus area study (FAS) for the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) National Water Census. The three main objectives of the USGS National Water Census are to (1) provide a nationally consistent set of indicators that reflect each status and trend relating to the availablity of water resources in the United States, (2) provide information and tools that allow users to better understand the flow requirements for ecological purposes, and (3) report on areas of significant competition over water resources and the factors that have led to the competition. The URGB FAS will help meet these objectives through an integrated,...
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The Coastal Carolinas Focus Area Study (CC FAS) examines water availability and use to meet competing societal and ecological needs in Southeastern Atlantic Coastal Basins of the Carolinas. The study area is focused along the coastline of the Carolinas, extending from Georgetown, South Carolina to Wilmington, North Carolina, and includes lower parts of the Cape Fear River and Pee Dee River basins. Projected changes in population, land-use, and climate is expected to place significant stress on water resources in the Coastal Carolinas. To investigate impacts from these stressors, this study was divided into five distinct components: (1) Societal Water-Use Data Compilation and Refinement, (2) Land-use, Population,...
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This project, part of the Water Mission Area's Water Availability and Use Science Program, seeks to estimate components of the water budget, including water use, for the Nation. The water budget project framework provides an infrastructure for comparison within models and between simulated and observed values to improve our understanding of the interaction of water budget components towards improved estimates of water availability.


    map background search result map search result map Delaware River Geographic Focus Area Study Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint Rivers Geographic Focus Area Study Colorado River Geographic Focus Area Study National Water Census Data Resources Portal Coastal Carolinas Focus Area Study @ Mississippi Alluvial Plain (MAP) Regional Water-Availability Study Upper Rio Grande Basin Focus Area Study Red River Focus Area Study Water Budget Estimation and Evaluation Project Delaware River Geographic Focus Area Study Coastal Carolinas Focus Area Study Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint Rivers Geographic Focus Area Study Upper Rio Grande Basin Focus Area Study @ Mississippi Alluvial Plain (MAP) Regional Water-Availability Study Red River Focus Area Study Colorado River Geographic Focus Area Study National Water Census Data Resources Portal Water Budget Estimation and Evaluation Project