Predictive simulation of flow and solute transport for managing the coastal aquifer of the Dakshina Kannada district, Karnataka, India
Date
2016
Authors
U. A, Lathashri
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The present investigation is intended to simulate the response of an unconfined,
shallow, tropical coastal aquifer to anticipated future stress scenarios due to
developmental activities and climate change effect. The simulation of groundwater
flow and solute transport are carried out using SEAWAT. The model is applied to the
coastal basin of Dakshina Kannada district of Karnataka state, India having an areal
extent of about 155 km2 in. The study area is divided into four sub-basins for the
simulation considering the natural boundaries. They are the basins between
Shambhavi river and Pavanje river (sub-basin 1), Pavanje river and Gurpur river (subbasin 2), Gurpur river and Netravathi river (sub-basin 3), Netravathi river and
Talapady river (sub-basin 4).
It is learnt from the field investigations that, the basin is predominantly an unconfined
aquifer with depth ranging from 12m to 30m. The region is mainly covered by the
lateritic formation below the top soil. The aquifer profiling was plotted based on the
vertical electrical sounding. The aquifer parameters are estimated based on pumping
test results. Nine aquifer hydraulic parameter zones are mapped for each basin based
on pumping tests evaluations. The transmissivity values range from 10 to 1440
m
2/day.
The numerical simulation of groundwater flow was carried out by building a
MODFLOW model to the basin and the transport parameters are assigned to execute
the MT3DMS model. Finally, the SEAWAT model which is a coupled version of
MODFLOW and MT3DMS designed to simulate three-dimensional, variable density
groundwater flow and multi-species transport is developed. The model of each subbasin has two dimensional grids in the horizontal plane with an approximate cell
dimension of 100×100m with a single vertical layer. The digital elevation model
(DEM) developed for the study area is interpolated to the top elevation of the model
grid. The base of the model layer is set at -30m (with respect to mean sea level),
which corresponds to the base of the shallow unconfined aquifer. The recharge is
assigned on the upper-most active (wet) layer of the model during the monsoonii
season (June to September). A total of 587, 730, 835 and 996 wells are introduced in
the agricultural area of sub-basin 1, 2 , 3 and 4 respectively, based on the village wise
installation of irrigation pump set data. The draft per well is assigned based on the
water requirement of crops, i.e. evapo-transpiration in the absence of actual data. A
constant concentration of TDS 35kg/m3 is specified to the model cells along the
western boundary (Arabian sea). For rivers, TDS = 35 kg/m3and 17.5kg/m3 are
considered during the non-monsoon (October to May) and monsoon (June to
September) respectively considering the quantum of mixing of freshwater and
seawater.
The model is calibrated from September 2011 to August 2013 using observed
groundwater heads and salinity data obtained from 29 observation wells. In the
present study, PEST is used to calibrate the model. The total simulation period of two
years has been divided into 24 stress periods. Daily time step has been considered for
the transient simulation applying all the hydro-geologic conditions of the same period.
The model is validated for the following year (2013-14). Both the flow and transport
model performance during the monsoon (June to Sept) is not up to the mark, with all
the three evaluation techniques (R2, RMSE and NSE) showing deviation from the
desired levels. Overall, the model performance is satisfactory with NSE ≥ 0.5.
The calibrated values of horizontal hydraulic conductivity and specific yield of the
unconfined aquifer range from 1.85m/day to 49.50 m/day and 0.006 to 0.281. These
values agree with the range established by the aquifer characterization studies carried
out earlier. Also, recharge co-efficient of 20% of rainfall, porosity of 30% and river
bed conductance of 10 m/day are obtained as appropriate parameters during the
calibration process. The longitudinal dispersivity of 35m, transverse dispersivity of
3.5m and molecular diffusion co-efficient of 8.64 × 10-5m2/day are achieved.
The spatial distribution map of groundwater table shows a gradually increasing trend
from the coastline and the rivers towards the landward side (high elevated area). The
water table rises to maximum elevation of about 43m (above msl) in sub-basin 1 and
3. The month of May is visibly drier than the month of August, with the lowest
groundwater level contour moving towards inland by about 200m to 900m in
comparison with that during the monsoon. Water balance study shows that, more thaniii
75% of available water is being discharged to the sea during the wet season compared
to that during the dry season throughout the coastline. The river Gurupur contributes
hugely to the aquifer throughout the calibration period. This is due to the fact that the
area surrounding the river is a low lying marshy land.
The management of freshwater aquifers within 1 km from the sea is of prime
importance for sustainability against seawater intrusion. The salinity distribution
across the study area for sub-basins 1, 2, 3 and 4 during the month of May 2013
shows a similar pattern in all the four sub-basins. An important outcome is that, the
rivers that surround the system on the north and the south sides contribute equally as
that of the sea in bringing in salinity into the aquifer. The TDS values are within 0.5
kg/m3 throughout the year, except that for well nos. 1, 15 and 25. It is essential to note
that, all these wells are very close to the rivers (less than 300 m).
The sensitivity analysis results clearly show that, the overall aquifer system is
sensitive to hydraulic conductivity, groundwater draft and recharge rate. The model is
sensitive to lower values of hydraulic conductivity (0.46 m/day to 12.40 m/day) and
higher values of recharge rate (28 mm/day). The results also show that, the lateral
movement of water from the river causes the adjoining area to respond differently to
changes in the parameters than away from it. No significant influence of river bed
conductance on the water table elevation was noticed over in the entire area except
that in sub-basin 1 and zones adjacent to the river flow. The aquifer was found to be
least sensitive to dispersivity, with the movement of salinity contour by just 10m for
every increase in 25% of the dispersivity value.
The area under consideration is recently experiencing exponential growth in terms of
urbanization, industrialization and other developmental activities. Hence, in order to
understand the response of the coastal unconfined aquifer to varied overdraft and
recharge scenarios, the SEAWAT is used to simulate over a considerably longer
period of 20 years (2014 to 2034). The fresh water drafts considered are symbolic in
nature and in this work, only electrically operated pumping units are accounted since
data on other wells are not available. Also, to account for soils with low permeability,
and decrease in rainfall, effect of decrease in recharge rate is also investigated.
Accordingly, five scenarios are planned for investigation. Scenario 1 representsiv
existing abstraction rate, calibrated recharge rate and no sea level rise. Scenario 2
considers decrease in recharge rate by 50% with other parameters same as scenario 1.
Scenario 3 simulates effect of varied freshwater draft of 50%, 100% and 150% of
existing draft rate for the wells (case 1, 2 and 3 respectively). Scenario 4, is a
combined case of scenarios 2 and 3. And finally, scenario 5 is scenario 4 with sea
level rise of 1mm/year.
When all the scenarios are compared, the water table is estimated to fall by 0.3m to
0.6 m compared to scenario 1. The study shows that, the decrease in recharge rate
(scenario 2) alone can raise the TDS to 5kg/m3 in the first 8 years of simulation.
However, with the present rate of groundwater utilization and recharge rate, the
aquifer can be considered safe for the next 16 years with TDS < 1.5 kg/m3. Every
50% increase in groundwater utilization causes the salinity to increase steeply with
every year of simulation till the end. Hence, except scenario 1 and scenario 3 (case 1),
the remaining scenarios lead to the salinity above the drinking water standards (TDS
> 1.5 kg/m3), by 6 years of operation.
To study the spatial effect on water table and advancement of salinity into the aquifer
from the coastline, well hydrographs and salinity at every 200m distance from the
coastline are investigated. As per the analysis, the aquifer beyond 200m from the sea
is safe (TDS<1.5kg/m3) against seawater intrusion for scenarios 1, 2 and 3. Only due
to scenario 4 (case 2 and 3), the seawater intrudes beyond 600 m up to 1200m making
the aquifer unsafe for utilization. The percentage area affected by seawater intrusion
due to different anticipated scenarios are estimated. Scenario 4 (case 3) is considered
to be the most unfavourable condition, with water quality becoming unfit for drinking
purpose over more than 35% area (TDS>1.5kg/m3). However, with the present stress
conditions continuing for the next 20 years, less than 10% of the total area is predicted
to be with TDS > 1.5 kg/m3. But, overdraft by three times the present rate i.e.
scenario 3 (case 3) may increase the salinity beyond 10% for sub-basins 1 and 2. In
the case of sub-basin 3, the water table falls by about 1.5m for every 50% increase in
the groundwater utilization rate, which is less than 1 m for the rest of the basins. The
simulation results for this basin show that, the wells within 500m from the sea and
rivers are highly saline with TDS>3kg/m3 which was also confirmed with fieldv
observations. In addition, simulations are carried out to estimate the effect of climate
change on seawater intrusion by considering anticipated sea level rise. The anticipated
sea level rise of 1mm/year along the coastline has negligible influence on
groundwater and salinity of the study area.
Description
Keywords
Department of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, Seawater intrusion, SEAWAT, Aquifer charecterization, Pumping tests, Coastal aquifer, Freshwater, MODFLOW, Solute transport, Groundwater modeling, Predictive simulation