Factsheet – Effectiveness of wetland restoration in mitigating extreme streamflows under future climate change in the White River watershed of Indiana
A research project funded by the Indiana Water Resources Research Center through the U.S. Geological Survey’s 104B annual base grants (section 104 of the Water Resources Research Act of 1984, as amended).
Start Date: 2019-05-31
End Date: 2020-05-30
Total Federal Funds: $15,000
Total Non-Federal Funds: $31,080
Climate change directly affects the availability of water resources in the US Midwest, including Indiana. It is projected that Indiana’s warming rate is accelerating, with an increase of precipitation in winter and spring. Indiana will experience drier and warmer crop growing seasons and wetter winters in the future. These conditions lead to various water management challenges in Indiana, including adaptation to more flooding and droughts and potentially a shift from rainfed agriculture to irrigation agriculture.
Wetlands are known to buffer streamflow by intercepting surface and sub-surface flows, thereby helping mitigate extreme flooding and droughts. Current restoration decisions usually focus on individual wetland projects and local site conditions, thus missing the aggregated effects of hydrologically connected wetlands at the watershed scale.
Research Objectives
- Better understand and quantify how wetland restoration will impact future streamflow regimes and help mitigate extreme flooding and drought events using a case study site, the White River watershed, a typical Midwest watershed with heavy agricultural practices and shrinking watersheds. This project used the Hydrological Simulation Program-FORTRAN model to design two scenarios of climate change and three scenarios of wetland restoration as applied to the White River watershed to determine:
- How future climate change in the White River watershed affects streamflow and surface water availability,
- How wetland restoration helps buffer high and low streamflows, and
- What are suggested plans for water conservation officials to consider under different future climate change scenarios.
- Serve as a pilot project for the fundraising and installation of additional continuous flow monitoring systems.