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LEARNING OBJECTIVES Although water is one of the most abundant resources on Earth, many important issues and problems are involved in water management. After reading this chapter, you should understand: • What a water budget is, and why it is useful in analyzing water supply problems and potential solutions. • What groundwater is, and what environmental problems are associated with its use. • How water can be conserved at home and in industrial and agricultural practice. • Why sustainable water management will become more difficult as the demand for water increases. • What the environmental impacts are of water projects such as dams, reservoirs, canals, and channelization. • What a wetland is, how wetlands function, and why they are important. • • What hazards are presented by river flooding. Why we are facing a growing global water shortage linked to our food supply. Summary • Water is a liquid with unique characteristics that has made life on Earth possible. • Although it is one of the most abundant and important renewable resources on Earth, more than 99% of Earth’s water is unavailable or unsuitable for beneficial human use because of its salinity or location. • The pattern of water supply and use on Earth at any particular point on the land surface involves interactions and linkages among the biological, hydrological, and rock cycles. To evaluate a region’s water resources and use patterns, a water budget is developed to define the natural variability and availability of water. • During the next several decades, it is expected that the total water withdrawn from streams and groundwater in the United States will decrease slightly, but the consumptive use will increase because of greater demands from a growing population and industry. • Water withdrawn from streams competes with in-stream needs, such as maintaining fish and wildlife therefore cause conflicts. habitats and navigation, and may • Groundwater use has resulted in a variety of environmental problems, including overdraft, loss of vegetation along watercourses, and land subsidence. • Because agriculture is the biggest user of water, conservation of water in agriculture has the most significant effect on sustainable water use. However, it is also important to practice water conservation at the personal level in our homes and to price water to encourage conservation and sustainability. • There is a need for a new philosophy in water resource management that considers sustainability and uses creative alternatives and variable sources. Development of a master plan involves inclusion of normal sources of surface water and groundwater, conservation programs, and use of reclaimed water. • Development of water supplies and facilities to more efficiently move water may cause considerable environmental degradation; construction of reservoirs and canals and channelization of rivers should be considered carefully in light of potential environmental impacts. • Wetlands serve a variety of functions at the ecosystem level that benefit other ecosystems and people. • Flooding is perhaps the most universal natural hazard in the world; both the frequency and the severity of flooding of small streams are increased by urbanization. The preferable and most environmentally sound adjustment to flooding is land-use planning that avoids building on floodplains. • The Colorado River in the southwestern United States and northern Mexico is one of the most regulated rivers in the world. Understanding links among physical, biological, and social systems of the Colorado River is necessary to manage its water resources and ecosystems. • We are facing a growing global water shortage linked to the food supply.