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Optimal pumping strategies for managing shallow, poorquality groundwater, western San Joaquin Valley, California

January 1, 1995

Continued agricultural productivity in the western San Joaquin Valley, California, is threatened by the presence of shallow, poor-quality groundwater that can cause soil salinization. We evaluate the management alternative of using groundwater pumping to control the altitude of the water table and provide irrigation water requirements. A transient, three-dimensional, groundwater flow model was linked with nonlinear optimization to simulate management alternatives for the groundwater flow system. Optimal pumping strategies have been determined that substantially reduce the area subject to a shallow water table and bare-soil evaporation (that is, areas with a water table within 2.1 m of land surface) and the rate of drainflow to on-farm drainage systems. Optimal pumping strategies are constrained by the existing distribution of wells between the semiconfined and confined zones of the aquifer, by the distribution of sediment types (and associated hydraulic conductivities) in the western valley, and by the historical distribution of pumping throughout the western valley.

Publication Year 1995
Title Optimal pumping strategies for managing shallow, poorquality groundwater, western San Joaquin Valley, California
Authors P. Barlow, B. Wagner, K. Belitz
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Models for assessing and monitoring groundwater quality. Proc. symposium, Boulder, 1995
Index ID 70018804
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse