Drought Characterization with GPS: Insights into Groundwater and Reservoir Storage in California
Abstract
Drought intensity is commonly characterized using meteorologicly-based metrics that struggle to provide insight into water deficits within deeper hydrologic systems. In contrast, Global Positioning System (GPS) displacements are sensitive to both local and regional hydrologic-storage fluctuations. While a few studies have leveraged this sensitivity to produce geodetic drought indices, hydrologic drought characterization using GPS is not commonly accounted for in drought assessment and management. To motivate this application, we produce a new geodetic drought index (GDI) and quantify its ability to characterize hydrologic drought conditions in key surface and sub-surface hydrologic reservoirs across California. In northern California, the GDI exhibits a strong regional association with reservoir storage at the 1-month time scale (correlation coefficient: 0.83) and groundwater levels at the 3-month time scale (correlation coefficient: 0.87), along with moderate associations with stream discharge at the daily (instantaneous) time scale (correlation coefficient: 0.50). Groundwater in southern California is best characterized with a 12-month GDI (correlation coefficient: 0.77), and reservoir storage is optimized with the 3-month GDI (correlation coefficient: 0.72). Differences between northern and southern California reveal that the GDI is sensitive to unique aquifer and drainage basin characteristics. In addition to capturing long-term hydrologic trends, rapid changes in the GDI initiate during clusters of large atmospheric river events that closely mirror fluctuations in traditional hydrologic and meteorological observations. We show that GPS-based hydrologic drought indices provide a significant opportunity to improve drought assessment, in California and beyond, by improving our understanding of the hydrologic cycle.