Modeling water quantity and quality in an agricultural watershed in the midwestern US using SWAT: assessing implications due to an expansion in 'biofuel' production and climate change
Sudipta Kumar Mishra
University of Iowa
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
Autumn 2013
DOI: 10.17077/etd.4y7ioshx
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<p>Iowa finds itself positioned at the epicenter of agricultural pollution due to the intensity of crop and livestock production, fertilizer inputs, altered hydrological landscapes, and other factors. To address such issues, the overarching objective of this research work was to understand the implications of an expansion in bioenergy crops as mandated by the Environmental Protection Agency's Renewable Fuel Standard 2 (through 2022) on hydrology and water quality in an agricultural watershed.</p>
<p>In this research, the Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model was calibrated and validated using field data obtained through water quality sensors and grab samples, and then model parameters were estimated for sensitivity and uncertainty analysis. Scenarios were generated based on Renewable Fuel Standards and evaluated for understanding the impacts of expanding bioenergy production on hydrology and water quality. Also output from an agent-based model was incorporated into SWAT for simulating watershed responses to different crop market scenarios. Finally SWAT model output under eighteen scenarios, was generated for six different climate models and analyzed to see changes in various water quantity outputs e.g. surface flow, base flow, and ET.</p>
<p>The SWAT Model was calibrated and validated within statistically acceptable limits e.g. R2 > 0.85 of observed monthly hydrologic mass and R2 > 0.7 for nutrients loads. Sediment load was reduced by 15% due to conversion of corn acreage into switch grass on high elevation land with a slope of>5% (roughly 12% of the watershed). Model simulations also showed that linear climatic inputs (i.e. linear temporal trends increase in precipitation and max/min air temperature) can generate non-linear responses amongst different components of the water cycle (i.e. surface flow, base flow, ET, and deep percolation rates) in the watershed model. This research effort will help to produce a prototype Intelligent Digital Watershed (IDW) to understand the interactions between water and human systems, with the goal of a sustainable agricultural economy. The IDW should enable discovery of scenarios that result in water quality that meets water quality standards.</p>
Civil and Environmental Engineering Biofuel
Details
Title: Subtitle
Modeling water quantity and quality in an agricultural watershed in the midwestern US using SWAT: assessing implications due to an expansion in 'biofuel' production and climate change
Creators
Sudipta Kumar Mishra - University of Iowa
Contributors
Jerald L. Schnoor (Advisor)
Marian Muste (Advisor)
Nandita Basu (Committee Member)
Allen Bradley (Committee Member)
David Bennett (Committee Member)
Resource Type
Dissertation
Degree Awarded
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), University of Iowa
Degree in
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Date degree season
Autumn 2013
Publisher
University of Iowa
DOI
10.17077/etd.4y7ioshx
Number of pages
xv, 185 pages
Copyright
Copyright 2013 Sudipta Kumar Mishra
Language
English
Description illustrations
color illustrations
Description bibliographic
Includes bibliographical references (pages 174-185).
Academic Unit
Civil and Environmental Engineering
Record Identifier
9983776829402771
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Modeling water quantity and quality in an agricultural watershed