_version_ 1867169129162604544
author Taffarello, Denise
Srinivasan, Raghavan
Mohor, Guilherme Samprogna
Guimarães, João Luis Bittencourt
Calijuri, Maria do Carmo
Mendiondo, Eduardo Mario
author_facet Taffarello, Denise
Srinivasan, Raghavan
Mohor, Guilherme Samprogna
Guimarães, João Luis Bittencourt
Calijuri, Maria do Carmo
Mendiondo, Eduardo Mario
collection Datos científicos de ciencias marinas y ambientales
contents Although hydrologic models provide hypothesis testing of complex dynamics occurring at catchments, freshwater quality modeling is still incipient at many subtropical headwaters. In Brazil, a few modeling studies assess freshwater nutrients, limiting policies on hydrologic ecosystem services. This paper aims to compare freshwater quality scenarios under different land-use and land-cover (LULC) change, one of them related to ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA), in Brazilian headwaters. Using the spatially semidistributed Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model, nitrate, total phosphorous (TP) and sediment were modeled in catchments ranging from 7.2 to 1037 km². These headwaters were eligible areas of the Brazilian payment for ecosystem services (PES) projects in the Cantareira System, which had supplied water to 9 million people in the Sao Paulo metropolitan region. We considered SWAT modeling of three LULC scenarios: (i) recent past scenario (S1), with historical LULC in 1990; (ii) current land-use scenario (S2), with LULC for the period 2010-2015 with field validation; and (iii) future land-use scenario with PES (S2 + EbA). This latter scenario proposed forest cover restoration through EbA following the river basin plan by 2035. These three LULC scenarios were tested with a selected record of rainfall and evapotranspiration observed in 2006-2014, with the occurrence of extreme droughts. To assess hydrologic services, we proposed the hydrologic service index (HSI), as a new composite metric comparing water pollution levels (WPL) for reference catchments, related to the grey water footprint (greyWF) and water yield. On the one hand, water quality simulations allowed for the regionalization of greyWF at spatial scales under LULC scenarios. According to the critical threshold, HSI identified areas as less or more sustainable catchments. On the other hand, conservation practices simulated through the S2 + EbA scenario envisaged not only additional and viable best management practices (BMP), but also preventive decision-making at the headwaters of water supply systems.
format Dataset Open Access
id pangaea_https___doi_org_10_1594_PANGAEA_892384
institution PANGAEA
language en
publishDate 2018
publisher PANGAEA
record_format pangaea
spellingShingle Water quality and quantity primary data from field campaigns in the Cantareira Water Supply System, period Oct. 2013 - May 2014
Taffarello, Denise
Srinivasan, Raghavan
Mohor, Guilherme Samprogna
Guimarães, João Luis Bittencourt
Calijuri, Maria do Carmo
Mendiondo, Eduardo Mario
Area; Area/locality; Biological oxygen demand; Brazil; Cantareira; Chemical oxygen demand; Coliforms, in colony forming units; Color; Comment; Conductivity, electrical; DATE/TIME; Discharge; Escherichia coli in colony forming units; Flow velocity, water; LATITUDE; Latitude 2; LONGITUDE; Longitude 2; MULT; Multiple investigations; Nitrate; Nitrite; Nitrogen in ammonia; pH; Phosphate; Total solids; Turbidity (Nephelometric turbidity unit)
Although hydrologic models provide hypothesis testing of complex dynamics occurring at catchments, freshwater quality modeling is still incipient at many subtropical headwaters. In Brazil, a few modeling studies assess freshwater nutrients, limiting policies on hydrologic ecosystem services. This paper aims to compare freshwater quality scenarios under different land-use and land-cover (LULC) change, one of them related to ecosystem-based adaptation (EbA), in Brazilian headwaters. Using the spatially semidistributed Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model, nitrate, total phosphorous (TP) and sediment were modeled in catchments ranging from 7.2 to 1037 km². These headwaters were eligible areas of the Brazilian payment for ecosystem services (PES) projects in the Cantareira System, which had supplied water to 9 million people in the Sao Paulo metropolitan region. We considered SWAT modeling of three LULC scenarios: (i) recent past scenario (S1), with historical LULC in 1990; (ii) current land-use scenario (S2), with LULC for the period 2010-2015 with field validation; and (iii) future land-use scenario with PES (S2 + EbA). This latter scenario proposed forest cover restoration through EbA following the river basin plan by 2035. These three LULC scenarios were tested with a selected record of rainfall and evapotranspiration observed in 2006-2014, with the occurrence of extreme droughts. To assess hydrologic services, we proposed the hydrologic service index (HSI), as a new composite metric comparing water pollution levels (WPL) for reference catchments, related to the grey water footprint (greyWF) and water yield. On the one hand, water quality simulations allowed for the regionalization of greyWF at spatial scales under LULC scenarios. According to the critical threshold, HSI identified areas as less or more sustainable catchments. On the other hand, conservation practices simulated through the S2 + EbA scenario envisaged not only additional and viable best management practices (BMP), but also preventive decision-making at the headwaters of water supply systems.
title Water quality and quantity primary data from field campaigns in the Cantareira Water Supply System, period Oct. 2013 - May 2014
topic Area; Area/locality; Biological oxygen demand; Brazil; Cantareira; Chemical oxygen demand; Coliforms, in colony forming units; Color; Comment; Conductivity, electrical; DATE/TIME; Discharge; Escherichia coli in colony forming units; Flow velocity, water; LATITUDE; Latitude 2; LONGITUDE; Longitude 2; MULT; Multiple investigations; Nitrate; Nitrite; Nitrogen in ammonia; pH; Phosphate; Total solids; Turbidity (Nephelometric turbidity unit)
url https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.892384