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Why do a Long-Term Hydrologic Impact Assessment
It is important to consider the effects land use changes have on surface
runoff, streamflow, and groundwater recharge. Expansion of urban areas significantly
impacts the environment in terms of ground water recharge, water pollution,
and storm water drainage. Urbanization leads to creation of impervious surfaces
which lead to an increase in surface runoff volume, this in turn contributes
to downstream flooding and a net loss in groundwater recharge. Eventually
loss of recharge affects residential and municipal water supplies. Minimizing
the disturbance on an urbanizing watershed is one way of ensuring continued
water supply. Since each land use has a different level of impact, careful
physical planning can minimize these impacts. Although the impacts of urban
sprawl on groundwater recharge and surface water quantity and quality are
of considerable importance, many planners, city managers and water resource
professionals lack the ability to provide estimates of the potential hydrologic
impacts of land use change.
Assessment of the hydrologic impacts or urban land use change traditionally
includes models that evaluate how land use change alters peak runoff rates,
and these results are then used in the design of drainage systems. Such methods
however do not address the long-term hydrologic impacts of urban land use
change and often do not consider how pollutants that wash off from different
land uses effect water quality. Techniques traditionally used to assess the
impacts of land use change on runoff typically focus on individual short-term
"design" storm events of specific recurrence intervals, and are used to calculate
peak discharge rates and hydrographs. Single storm methods are suitable as
engineering approaches in estimating flood intensities for stormwater facilities
management, they do not address the long-term, cumulative hydrologic impacts
of land use change.
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