Predicting land-use change and its impact on the groundwater system of the Kleine Nete catchment, Belgium
Predicting land-use change and its impact on the groundwater system of the Kleine Nete catchment, Belgium
Date
2008
Authors
Dams, J
Woldeamlak, S T
Batelaan, Okke
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Copernicus Publications / European Geosciences Union
Abstract
Land-use changes are frequently indicated to
be one of the main human-induced factors influencing the
groundwater system. For land-use change, groundwater research
has mainly focused on the change in water quality
thereby neglecting changes in quantity. The objective of
this paper is to assess the impact of land-use changes, from
2000 until 2020, on the hydrological balance and in particular
on groundwater quantity, as results from a case study
in the Kleine Nete basin, Belgium. New is that this study
tests a methodology, which couples a land-use change model
with a water balance and a steady-state groundwater model.
Although
the averages found appear to indicate small changes in
the groundwater system, spatial analysis shows that much
larger changes are located near the major cities in the study
area. Hence, spatial planning should take better account of
effects of land-use change on the groundwater system and
define mitigating actions for reducing the negative impacts
of land-use change.
Description
Keywords
Belgium,
Land use,
Water supply
Citation
Dams, J., Woldeamlak, S.T. and Batelaan, O., 2008. Predicting land-use change and its impact on the groundwater system of the Kleine Nete catchment, Belgium. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 12, 1369-1385.