Local water use and climate drive water stress over the conterminous United States with substantial impacts to fish species of conservation concern

ESS Open Archive
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

There is a growing need for consistent, large-scale estimates of water availability to identify and avoid potential conflicts among human and ecosystem uses of water. We present an assessment of water limitation, defined as the monthly balance (difference) between water supply (ws) and human consumptive water use (wc), for the conterminous United States (CONUS) during water years 2010–2020.  We estimate that 26.7 million Americans, 8% of CONUS population, live in areas with chronic high or severe water limitation. Although ws greatly exceeds wc at the CONUS scale, water is limited locally or regionally due to spatial and temporal patterns in climate and wc. Our water limitation metric, the monthly supply and use index (SUI), peaked in 2012 during a widespread drought when 38% of the CONUS land area experienced elevated water stress.  The central and southwestern U.S. experienced the highest SUI due to the combination of low ws and high wc, especially for crop irrigation. Spatial overlays of SUI and habitat ranges for fish species, including those of conservation concern, revealed that several species had notable proportions of their habitat exposed to high or severe water limitation during spawning season over the modeled time period, especially the Arkansas River shiner. Water supply (ws) was calculated from two CONUS, physically based, hydrologic models while wc was calculated from three CONUS models of water use for crop irrigation, thermoelectric power generation, and public supply.  The ws and wc values were routed through a stream network and used to calculate water limitation for human populations and fish species at the scale of 12-digit hydrologic unit codes (HUC12s, 50-100 km2 catchments) and then analyzed using SUI.  Evaluation of water availability at higher spatial and temporal resolution promotes more comprehensive analyses of the drivers of water availability and can be combined with complementary studies of water quality and water limiting thresholds to better understand the limitations on water availability.

Study Area

Publication type Preprint
Publication Subtype Preprint
Title Local water use and climate drive water stress over the conterminous United States with substantial impacts to fish species of conservation concern
Series title ESS Open Archive
DOI 10.22541/essoar.173655431.12049152/v1
Year Published 2025
Language English
Publisher ESS Open Archive
Contributing office(s) WMA - Earth System Processes Division
Description 29 p.
Country United States
Other Geospatial conterminous United States
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details