Water balance of Crimea for 2001–2021 based on ground and remote sensing data

Cover Page

Cite item

Full Text

Abstract

Estimates of precipitation, evaporation, river runoff, potential evaporation and components of basin water storage were obtained for the territory of Crimea and a number of its river basins for 2001–2021. The period 2014–2021 was characterized by greater aridity compared to 2001–2013, namely a decrease in the precipitation and river runoff and an increase in the evapotranspiration. The streamflow balance tends to decrease from the upper parts of the catchment to the lower parts. The exception is the Belbek basin, where the area of runoff losses falls on the middle part of the catchment. Analysis of changes in measured and climatic runoff for two periods showed an increase in non-evaporation runoff losses in many mountainous and foothill areas, which is probably related to a decrease in groundwater inflow and an increase in water withdrawal. At the same time, it is possible that for the plain parts of the catchments of the Alma, Chernaya, Belbek and Kacha rivers, as well as the upper reaches of the Salgir, there was an increase in river runoff as a result of groundwater exploitation and further wastewater inflow into the rivers. The decrease in runoff within the Salgir basin by 0–40 mm can be partially explained by the closure of the North Crimean Canal in 2014. The estimated decrease in groundwater storage within the Crimea for 2003–2020 was of the order of 150 mm.

About the authors

V. Yu. Grigorev

Lomonosov Moscow State University; Water Problems Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

Author for correspondence.
Email: vadim308g@mail.ru

Lomonosov Moscow State University, Faculty of Geography, Department of Land Hydrology

Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991; Moscow, 119333

A. G. Kositskii

Lomonosov Moscow State University

Email: vadim308g@mail.ru

Faculty of Geography, Department of Land Hydrology

Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991

N. L. Frolova

Lomonosov Moscow State University

Email: frolova_nl@mail.ru

Faculty of Geography, Department of Land Hydrology

Russian Federation, Moscow, 119991

References

  1. Григорьев В.Ю., Фролова Н.Л., Киреева М.Б., Степаненко В.М. Пространственно-временная изменчивость ошибки воспроизведения осадков реанализом ERA5 на территории России // Изв. РАН. Сер. географическая. 2022. Т. 86. № 3. С. 435–446.
  2. Chao L., Zhang K., Wang J., Feng J., Zhang M. A Comprehensive Evaluation of Five Evapotranspiration Datasets Based on Ground and GRACE Satellite Observations: Implications for Improvement of Evapotranspiration Retrieval Algorithm // Remote. Sens. 2021. V. 13. № 12. 2414. https://doi.org/10.3390/RS13122414
  3. Fick S.E., Hijmans R.J. WorldClim 2: new 1-km spatial resolution climate surfaces for global land areas // Int. J. Climatol. 2017. V. 37. P. 4302–4315.
  4. Gorbunov R., Gorbunova T., Kononova N., Priymak A., Salnikov A., Drygval A., Lebedev Ya. Spatiotemporal aspects of interannual changes precipitation in the crimea // J. Arid Environ. 2020. 183:104280.
  5. Güntner A., Sharifi E., Haas J., Ruz Vargas C., Kidd R. Global Gravity-based Groundwater Product. 2023. https://doi.org/10.3030/870353
  6. Gusev E.M., Dzhogan L.Y., Nasonova O.N. Water Safety of the Steppe Crimea and the Possible Ways to Its Improvement // Water. Resour. 2022. V. 49. № 4. P. 543–554.
  7. Kampf S.K., Burges S.J., Hammond J.C., Bhaskar A., Covino T.P., Eurich A., Harrison H., Lefsky M., Martin C., McGrath D., Puntenney‐Desmond K., Willi K. The Case for an Open Water Balance: Re-envisioning Network Design and Data Analysis for a Complex, Uncertain World // Water. Resour. Res. 2020. V. 56. № 6. 56:e2019WR026699.
  8. Kositskii A.G., Bogutskaya E.M., Grechushnikova M.G., Grigor’ev V.Yu., Sazonov A.A., Kharlamov M.A., Frolova N.L. Assessing the Local Renewable Water Resources in the Crimean Peninsula // Water. Resour. 2022. V. 49. № 4. P. 582–594.
  9. Liu Y., Wagener T., Beck H.E., Hartmann A. What is the hydrologically effective area of a catchment? // Environ. Res. Lett. 2020. V. 15. № 10. 15:104024.
  10. Running S.W., Mu Q., Zhao M., Moreno A. User’s Guide MODIS Global Terrestrial Evapotranspiration (ET) Product (MOD16A2/A3 and Year-end Gap-filled MOD16A2GF/A3GF) NASA Earth Observing System MODIS Land Algorithm (For Collection 6) Version 2.2. 2019.

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2024 Russian Academy of Sciences