Optimal management of a Hawaiian coastal aquifer with nearshore marine ecological interactions

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Abstract

We optimize groundwater management in the presence of marine consequences of submarine groundwater discharge (SGD). Concern for marine biota increases the optimal steady-state head level of the aquifer. The model is discussed in general terms for any coastal groundwater resource where SGD has a positive impact on valuable nearshore resources. Our application focuses on the Kona Coast of Hawaii, where SGD is being actively studied and where both nearshore ecology and groundwater resources are serious sociopolitical issues. To incorporate the consequences of water extraction on nearshore resources, we impose a safe minimum standard for the quantity of SGD. Efficient pumping rates fluctuate according to various growth requirements on the keystone marine algae and different assumptions regarding recharge rates. Desalination is required under average recharge conditions and a strict minimum standard and under low recharge conditions regardless of minimum standards of growth. © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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Duarte, T. K., Pongkijvorasin, S., Roumasset, J., Amato, D., & Burnett, K. (2010). Optimal management of a Hawaiian coastal aquifer with nearshore marine ecological interactions. Water Resources Research, 46(11). https://doi.org/10.1029/2010WR009094

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