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Estimated Stream Depletion in the Nebraska Platte Basin due to New Irrigated Land after 07/01/1997

This presentation outlines the mapping of irrigated land and the determination of changes in irrigated land in the Nebraska Platte Basin. It also discusses the net irrigation requirement, groundwater flow models used, and how new depletions are determined.

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Estimated Stream Depletion in the Nebraska Platte Basin due to New Irrigated Land after 07/01/1997

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  1. Estimated Stream Depletion in the Nebraska Platte Basin due to New Irrigated Land after 07/01/1997 Prepared by the Cooperative Hydrology Study (COHYST) for the Nebraska Department of Natural Resources (DNR) July 2006

  2. Outline of Presentation • Mapping irrigated land • Determining changes in irrigated land • Table of changes in irrigated land • Determining net irrigation requirement • Groundwater flow models used in analysis • How new depletions are determined

  3. Outline (continued) • Map of reaches used in analysis • New depletions by reach • New depletions from the Hydrologically Connected Area for the Overappropiated Basins (HCA/OA) and Eastern Analysis Area (EAA)

  4. Mapping Irrigated Land • CALMIT – Center for Advanced Land Management Information Technologies • University of Nebraska – Lincoln • Patti Dappen • http://www.calmit.unl.edu

  5. 1997 (COHYST) Ogallala Keith County

  6. 1997 (continued) Kearney Kearney County

  7. 2001 (COHYST) Ogallala Keith County

  8. 2001 (continued) Kearney Kearney County

  9. 2005 (DNR) Ogallala Keith County

  10. 2005 (continued) Kearney Kearney County

  11. Changes in Irrigated Land • DNR processed 1997, 2001, and 2005 irrigated land maps to get changes in irrigated land • 2001 - 1997 = 1997-01 gained irrigated land • 1997 - 2001 = 1997-01 lost irrigated land • 2005 - 2001 = 2001-05 gained irrigated land • 2001 - 2005 = 2001-05 lost irrigated land

  12. Change (continued) • Ignored surface-water irrigated areas • Parcels < 1.0 acre eliminated • Edge effects eliminated Examples of edge effects Green is gained irrigated land Red is lost irrigated land

  13. 1997-01 Change Gained irrigated land Lost irrigated land Keith County

  14. 1997-01 Change (continued) Gained irrigated land Lost irrigated land Kearney County

  15. 2001-05 Change Lost irrigated land Gained irrigated land Corners gained Keith County

  16. 2001-05 Change (continued) Lost corners Lost irrigated land Gained irrigated land Kearney County

  17. Summary of Changes • 1997-01 • 282,780 irrigated acres gained • 78,380 irrigated acres lost • 204,400 acres net gain • 2001-05 • 383,780 irrigated acres gained • 80,170 irrigated acres lost • 303,610 acres net gain • 1997-05 net gain 508,010 acres

  18. Net Gain by County

  19. Net Gain by County

  20. Net Gain by County

  21. Net Irrigation Requirement1997-2038 • NIR was computed by CropSim • NIR was based on 1997-98 meteorological conditions • 1997 was slightly dryer than 104-year average (-0.47 inches) • Range was +0.76 inches (Climate Division 1) to -1.98 inches (Climate Division 6) • NIR was based on 1997-98, 2001-02, and 2005-06 crop mix • NIR was held constant for 2005-38 • NIR was averaged by Model Unit

  22. NIR (continued) Model Units for NIR Note model overlap Note areas of model overlap

  23. NIR (continued)

  24. GW Models Used in Analysis • 160 acre cell size • WMU 1 layer; CMU 6 layers; EMU 5 layers • Calibrated to pre-1950 and 1950-98 conditions • Peer reviewed by Eagle Resources • Priority items from peer review incorporated into models • Models are reasonable representation of actual conditions • Models are adequate to estimate effects of gained or lost irrigated land on baseflow to streams

  25. How Models Were Used for this Analysis • Models were run for 40 years • May 1, 1998 through April 30, 2038 • Models produced a water budget at the end of each month • Models were first run without any change in irrigated land using average 1995-97 recharge and 1997 pumpage – Baseline Condition

  26. Models (continued) • New pumpage was based on product of change in irrigated acres and net irrigation requirement • Acres in 1997, 2001, and 2005 were from CALMIT maps • Changes in acres between 1997, 2001, and 2005 were interpolated based on counts from well registrations • Changes in net irrigation requirement between 1997, 2001, and 2005 were linear interpolations

  27. Models (continued) • Pumpage was added to the model for gained irrigated land • Pumpage was removed from the model for lost irrigated land • Pumpage for May 1, 2005 through April 30, 2006 was repeated each year thereafter • No extrapolation of new irrigated land after 2005 • Reasonable because of stays on new irrigated land

  28. Models (continued) • Models were run with pumpage representing changes in irrigated land – Added Pumpage Condition • Added pumpage condition was compared to Baseline condition to determine net depletion to stream baseflow due to changes in irrigated land after 1997

  29. Models (continued) • Analysis was done for six reaches • Wyoming line to Kingsley Dam • Kingsley Dam to Tri-County Supply Canal diversion • Tri-County Supply Canal diversion to Lexington • Lexington to U.S. Highway 183 • U.S. Highway 183 to Chapman • Chapman to Columbus

  30. Models (continued) Reaches used in analysis A – Wyoming to Kingsley Dam (blue streams) B – Kingsley Dam to Tri-County Supply Canal (violet streams) C – Tri-County Supply Canal to Lexington (cyan streams) D – Lexington to U.S. Highway 183 (pink streams) E – U.S. Highway 183 to Chapman (blue streams) F – Chapman to Columbus (violet streams) Reaches used in analysis A F Streams are assigned to reach based on where they contribute to flow of Platte River B C D E

  31. Results • Monthly results are reported in acre-feet per day • One acre-foot per day equals • 0.504 cubic feet per second • 226 gallons per minute • Cumulative results are presented in thousands of acre-feet • One thousand acre-feet equals 325,900,000 gallons

  32. Results – Wyoming line to Kingsley Dam (A)

  33. Results – Kingsley Dam to Tri-County (B)

  34. Results – Tri-County to Lexington (C)

  35. Results – Lexington to Hwy. 183 (D)

  36. Results – Hwy. 183 to Chapman (E) Source of noise still being investigated

  37. Results – Chapman to Columbus (F)

  38. Results (continued) Annual results for year ending May 1 of indicated year Units are thousands of acre-feet per year

  39. Results (continued) Cumulative results Units are thousands of acre-feet

  40. Second Analysis • Hydrologically Connected Area for the Overappropriated Basin (HCA/OA) • Administrative determination by DNR • Based on 28% stream depletion in 40 years • Eastern Analysis Area (EAA) • Developed for comparative purposes • Based on 10% depletion in 50 years • Developed for Highway 183 to Chapman only • Effects of gained or lost irrigated land only in HCA/OA and EAA

  41. HCA/OA and EAA HCA/OA EAA

  42. Summary of Changes in HCA/OA and EAA • 1997-01 • 47,170 irrigated acres gained • 18,770 irrigated acres lost • 28,400 acres net gain (13.9% of total) • 2001-05 • 70,460 irrigated acres gained • 26,870 irrigated acres lost • 43, 590 acres net gain (14.4% of total) • 1997-05 net gain 72,000 (14.2% of total)

  43. Net in HCA/OA and EAA by County

  44. HCA/OA - EAA – Wyoming line to Kingsley Dam (A) HCA/OA – EAA only Everywhere

  45. HCA/OA - EAA – Kingsley Dam to Tri-County Canal (B) HCA/OA – EAA only Everywhere

  46. HCA/OA - EAA – Tri-County to Lexington (C) Everywhere

  47. HCA/OA - EAA – Lexington to Hwy. 183 (D) HCA/OA – EAA only Everywhere

  48. HCA/OA - EAA – Hwy. 183 to Chapman (E) HCA/OA – EAA only Everywhere

  49. HCA/OA - EAA – Chapman to Columbus (F) EAA is not defined below Chapman Everywhere

  50. Results (continued) Annual results for year ending May 1 of indicated year Units are thousands of acre-feet per year

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