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Abstract for Marios A. Sophocleous


Environmental implications of intensive groundwater use with special regard to streams and wetlands
by Marios Sophocleous
Chapter 4, in: E. Custodio and R. Llamas (eds.), Groundwater Intensive Use: Challenges and Opportunities. A.A. Balkema Publishers, Lisse, The Netherlands, p. 93-112.

Abstract

Groundwater is a highly vulnerable and important resource to both humans and the environment. Therefore it is essential to understand the environmental implications of groundwater over-exploitation. This chapter emphasizes the hydrologic fundamentals for such understanding, which involve groundwater flow system concepts, the factors controlling aquifer responses to development, and surface water-groundwater interactions, and highlights the environmental consequences of groundwater over-exploitation throughout the world. Groundwater intensive use does not only result in aquifer depletion and water quality degradation but also impacts the ecological integrity of streams and wetlands, and results in significant losses of habitat and biodiversity. It is clear that over-exploitation and pollution in many regions of the world are threatening groundwater resources with serious consequences for human welfare and environmental degradation. Thus it is necessary for societies to recognize the finite limits of water availability and its vulnerability, and find ways to reconcile the demands of human development with the tolerance of nature.

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Kansas Geological Survey, Geohydrology Section

Updated June 18, 2003
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