The Importance of Ground Water in the Great Lakes Region
Water Resources Investigations Report 00 - 4008
| Previous Page | Back to Contents | Next Page |
Summary and Conclusions
Ground water is a
major natural resource in the Great Lakes Region because it indirectly
contributes more than 50 percent of the stream discharge to the Great Lakes. In
addition, ground water is the source of drinking water for millions of people
in the region, is an important source of supply for agriculture and many
industries, and provides a relatively uniform supply of water in some
ecologically sensitive areas to sustain plant and animal species. Therefore, to
improve our understanding of water-resources issues in the Great Lakes Region,
it is important to have a better understanding of the role that ground water
plays in the overall hydrologic system of the lakes.
The main ground-water resources issues in the Great
Lakes Region are related to the amount of ground water, the interaction of
ground water and surface water, changes in ground-water quality as development
expands, and ecosystem health related to quantity and quality of water.
Issues related to the amount of ground water
Although the amount of water in
the Great Lakes Region is vast, issues related to relatively small quantities
of water are being raised more and more often. For example, even though the
amount of ground water pumped in the region is small compared to the total
amount of water present, ground water is an important source of public-water
supply as well as an important source of supply for industrial, agricultural,
and domestic needs. Less clearly understood, however, is the relation between
the amount of streamflow discharging to the Great Lakes and the large portion
of that flow that originates as ground water. The implications of this
understanding for water- and land-use practices and, in turn, their effects on
water quantity and quality, have not been fully incorporated into a policy
framework. To help include information about the implications of the role that
ground water plays in addressing regional water issues, a comprehensive
analysis of indirect ground-water discharge to the Great Lakes is needed.
Direct ground-water discharge to the Great Lakes is
not a large factor in water-budget analyses for the Great Lakes. Locally,
however, direct ground-water discharge to the Great Lakes may be important,
even though the rates and places of discharge are not well known. A long-term
evaluation of direct ground-water discharge to the Great Lakes would help place
this hydrologic process in proper perspective. Near-shore areas with high rates
of direct ground-water discharge may provide valuable habitat for aquatic
organisms.
Issues related to the interaction of ground water and surface water
Withdrawal of ground water
removes that water from the watershed when it is consumptively used or when the
return flow is discharged to another drainage basin. Under these circumstances,
pumping ground water constitutes a diversion of Great Lakes water.
Alternatively, ground-water withdrawal could have the opposite effect of
diverting ground-water flow into the watershed by altering the ground-water
divides. In particular, as withdrawals associated with urban expansion
increase, more accurate data on the amount and effects of ground-water use need
to be collected. Data on the amounts of ground water pumped both within the
watershed and outside, but near the watershed boundaries needs to be collected
and evaluated for potential diversion of water to or from the Great Lakes. It
is currently thought that both irrigation and ground-water withdrawals near the
watershed boundaries constitute relatively small amounts of water; however,
both rapidly changing farming practices and rapidly expanding urban communities
could alter these amounts in a relatively short timeframe, especially during
drought periods. At present, the effects of ground-water withdrawals have been
quantified in detail at only a few urban locations.
In addition to quantifying the amount of water pumped
out of aquifers, it is also important to improve our knowledge of the amount of
water that is recharging them. Ground-water recharge rates estimated in earlier
studies cover only a small part of the Great Lakes Region. A comprehensive
study of ground-water recharge rates for the entire watershed is needed to more
completely determine the role of ground water in the hydrologic budget of the
Great Lakes.
Issues related to changes in ground-water quality as development expands
Ground-water quality is
as important as quantity for most water uses. As ground-water development
proceeds, the possibility of altering the quality of ground water increases.
The quality of ground water can be altered when water levels are drawn below
the layer that confines the aquifer or by inducing water of lesser quality into
an aquifer. Many local studies of these problems have been conducted, but few
regional-scale analyses of changes in ground-water quality as a result of
ground-water development have been done.
Issues related to ecosystem health and quantity and quality of ground water
Ground water is
essential to maintain wetlands and to provide healthy habitat for other aquatic
systems. Wetland hydrology is widely recognized as the primary influence on
wetland ecology, development, and persistence, and information about hydrology
is essential to understanding and quantifying wetland functions and processes.
Studies of the role of ground water in selected wetlands in a range of
physiographic settings throughout the Great Lakes watershed are needed to more
fully understand the role of wetlands in the Great Lakes Region.
| Previous Page | Back to Contents | Next Page |
|