USGS Builds Awareness With Water Budget Report

The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) recently released a document that illustrates the importance of water budgets as an essential tool in addressing concerns about water availability.

Ensuring sustainable water supplies requires an understanding of the hydrologic cycle. Water budgets enable an accounting of water as it moves through Earth's atmosphere, land surface and subsurface. This tool provides a quantitative basis for assessing how a natural or human-induced change in one part of the hydrologic cycle may affect other aspects of the cycle, according to USGS. The new document demonstrates how water budgets provide a foundation for effective water-resource and environmental planning and management, officials said.

Through this (document), the USGS seeks to broaden awareness and understanding of water budgets and the hydrologic cycle. We hope (the repor) will help natural resource professionals, public decision makers and citizens to better understand water budgets and to use that understanding to promote the wise use and management of a most precious resource - water." said Robert M. Hirsch, chief hydrologist for the USGS.

The report describes the value of water budgets through examples representing a variety of geographic areas and water-resources issues. Uncertainties that exist in water budgets are presented to provide an appreciation of the complex nature of evaluating how much water may be available for human and environmental needs. The study is relevant to a number of fields including agriculture, meteorology, climatology, aquatic ecology, mining, water supply, groundwater management, flood control, reservoir management, wetland and riparian ecology and pollution control.

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