| Authors | Mostafa Yaghoubzadeh,Artemis Roodari,Markus Hrachowitz, |
| Journal | Hydrology and Earth System Sciences |
| Page number | 1943-1967 |
| Serial number | 25 |
| Volume number | 4 |
| IF | 3.148 |
| Paper Type | Full Paper |
| Published At | 2021 |
| Journal Grade | ISI |
| Journal Type | Typographic |
| Journal Country | Belgium |
| Journal Index | JCR،Scopus |
Abstract
. The transboundary Helmand River basin (HRB)
is the main drainage system for large parts of Afghanistan
and the Sistan region of Iran. Due to the reliance of this
arid region on water from the Helmand River, a better understanding of hydrological-drought pattern and the underlying
drivers in the region is critically required for effective management of the available water. The objective of this paper
is therefore to analyze and quantify spatiotemporal pattern
of drought and the underlying processes in the study region.
More specifically we test for the Helmand River basin the
following hypotheses for the 1970–2006 period: (1) drought
characteristics, including frequency and severity, systematically changed over the study period; (2) the spatial pattern
and processes of drought propagation through the Helmand
River basin also changed; and (3) the relative roles of climate
variability and human influence on changes in hydrological
droughts can be quantified.
It was found that drought characteristics varied throughout the study period but largely showed no systematic trends.
The same was observed for the time series of drought indices SPI (standard precipitation index) and SPEI (standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index), which exhibited
considerable spatial coherence and synchronicity throughout
the basin, indicating that, overall, droughts similarly affect
the entire HRB with few regional or local differences. In
contrast, analysis of the SDI (streamflow drought index) exhibited significant negative trends in the lower parts of the
basin, indicating an intensification of hydrological droughts.
It could be shown that with a mean annual precipitation of
∼ 250 mm yr−1
, streamflow deficits and thus hydrological
drought throughout the HRB are largely controlled by precipitation deficits, whose annual anomalies on average account for ±50 mm yr−1
, or ∼ 20 % of the water balance of
the HRB, while anomalies of total evaporative fluxes on average only account for ±20 mm yr−1
. Assuming no changes in
the reservoir management practices over the study period, the
results suggest that the two reservoirs in the HRB only played
a minor role for the downstream propagation of streamflow
deficits, as indicated by the mean difference between inflow
and outflow during drought periods, which did not exceed
∼ 0.5 % of the water balance of the HRB. Irrigation water abstraction had a similarly limited effect on the magnitude of streamflow deficits, accounting for ∼ 10 % of the
water balance of the HRB. However, the downstream parts
of the HRB moderated the further propagation of streamflow deficits and associated droughts because of the minor
effects of reservoir operation and very limited agricultural
water in the early decades of the study period. This drought
moderation function of the lower basin was gradually and
systematically inverted by the end of the study period, when
the lower basin eventually amplified the downstream propagation of flow deficits and droughts. Our results provide
plausible evidence that this shift from drought moderation
to drought amplification in the lower basin is likely a consequence of increased agricultural activity and the associated
increases in irrigation water demand, from ∼ 13 mm yr−1
at the beginning of the study period to ∼ 23 mm yr−1
at the end,
and thus in spite of being only a minor fraction of the water
balance. Overall the results of this study illustrate that flow
deficits and the associated droughts in the HRB clearly reflect
the dynamic interplay between temporally varying regional
differences in hydro-meteorological variables together with
subtle and temporally varying effects linked to direct human
intervention.
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