Key groundwater indicators for sustainable social-ecological systems in drylands: a Mexican perspective
Fecha
2025Autor
Bravo Peña, Luis Carlos
Reyes Gómez, Victor Manuel
Huber Sanwald, Elisabeth
Esquivel Arriaga, Gerardo
Martinez Tagüeña, Natalia
Lucatello, Simone
Leyva Aguilera, Juana Claudia
Seigier, Georges
Borre, David
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Groundwater is an essential component of the natural water cycle, in particular, in drylands where water scarcity
is often severe. The recharge/extraction dynamics of aquifers is tightly coupled to the socio-economic development of these regions, which – over just a few decades - have become the most vulnerable biome complex both
to climate change and accelerated land use change. This project examined groundwater quality and quantity in
24 aquifers associated with five Socio-Ecological Participatory Observatory. They operate through the emergence of communities of practice; they are social innovations to foster transdisciplinary participatory research aimed at
sustainable development in the drylands of Mexico. Within the observatories, interest in exchanging knowledge
on groundwater, the review and diagnosis of data records and the results of quality analyses and piezometric
levels in wells has been encouraged. Of the water quality trends found, one salinity stands out, and has a high
content of chlorides, sulphates and carbonates, as well as reveal the presence of pollutants in some aquifers (As, F
mainly) and components of anthropogenic origin such as nitrate. This diagnostic baseline shows the limitations,
in various wells, on the quality of water for domestic, livestock and agricultural use. The abatement rates estimated in this process indicate annual values between 0.40 and 1.93 m per year, highlighting the high risk of
socio-environmental collapse in these areas where averages rainfall precipitations are of the order of 0.3 and 0.6
m. These advances serve as the basis to better reflect concrete outcomes, e.g., "The findings form a baseline for
future groundwater governance and participatory water management planning in arid regions.".
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