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Identificación de zonas potenciales de recarga y descarga de agua subterránea en la cuenca del río Ayuquila-Armería mediante el uso de SIG y el análisis multicriterio

  • Autores: Rodrigo Alejandro Hernández Juárez, Luis Manuel Martínez Rivera, Liliana Andrea Peñuela Arévalo, Samuel Rivera Reyes
  • Localización: Investigaciones geográficas, ISSN 0188-4611, ISSN-e 2448-7279, Nº. 101, 2020
  • Idioma: español
  • Títulos paralelos:
    • Identification of Potential Groundwater Recharge and Discharge Areas in the Ayuquila-Armeria River Basin Using GIS and Multi-Criteria Analysis
  • Enlaces
  • Resumen
    • español

      Esta investigación busca identificar las zonas de recarga y descarga del agua subterránea en la cuenca del río Ayuquila-Armería en los estados de Jalisco y Colima. La identificación de estas zonas se logró mediante un análisis multicriterio con la teoría de los sistemas de flujo (TSF). Esta teoría permite obtener una visión sistémica del ambiente, integrando diversos elementos de la naturaleza, además de reconocer el agua subterránea como agente geológico causante de una gran variedad de procesos y manifestaciones en la superficie a través de condiciones naturales contrastantes entre la zona de recarga y descarga de agua subterránea. La integración de los Sistemas de Información Geográfica (SIG) y el Análisis Multicriterio (AMC) permitió identificar los sitios con mayor potencial de recarga y descarga analizando geología, suelo, topoformas, pendiente, vegetación e índice topográfico de humedad (ITH). La superficie con alto potencial de recarga varía de 21% a 80%, mientras que la superficie de descarga, de 4% a 30%. Las principales zonas potenciales de recarga son la sierra de Cacoma-Manantlán, la sierra Verde, la sierra de Quila, la sierra de Tapalpa y el complejo volcánico del Nevado de Colima. Por su parte, las zonas de descarga se encuentran principalmente en las planicies costeras de Jalisco y Colima, así como en una zona de lagos interiores en San Marcos, Sayula y Zapotlán. Otras zonas de descarga las constituyen las planicies y los valles intermontanos de Unión de Tula y Autlán-El Grullo, así como los fondos de valles en V en determinadas zonas de la cuenca. 

    • English

      This research seeks to identify groundwater recharge and discharge areas in the administrative aquifers of the Ayuquila-Armeria river basin in the states of Jalisco and Colima, Mexico. The Ayuquila-Armeria river basin is one of the 15 most important of the 100 rivers running across the Pacific slope, and is among the 43 most important rivers at the country level. The regional climate is warm-humid in lowlands and subhumid temperate in highlands, with a summer rainy season (June to October) and a dry season the rest of the year. The basin shows a striking relief: from sea level to 4260 m a.s.l. at Nevado de Colima. The identification of these areas was based on a multi-criteria analysis of surface indicators of recharge and discharge areas supported by the flow systems theory (FST). This allows a systemic view of the environment, integrating various elements of nature, in addition to acknowledging groundwater and geological agent that causes a wide variety of processes and manifestations on the surface. The integration of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and the Multi-Criteria Analysis (MCA) made possible to evaluate the potential recharge/ discharge at the regional level by analyzing physical variables such as lithology, soil, relief, slope, vegetation, precipitation, and a topographic humidity index. In the study area, the territory with high recharge potential ranges from 21% to 80%; the area with low and very low recharge potential, from 4% to 30%. The main potential recharge areas are located in the upper portion of mid-elevation and low mountains covered by pine-oak, oak, and tropical deciduous forests, and grasslands, and to a lesser extent, fir and mountain cloud forests. Soil types include mainly Regosol, Leptosol, Cambisol, Luvisol, Andosol, Umbrisol, and Phaeozem in slopes of 15%-30% covering units of rhyolitic tuff, andesite-basalt, andesite, lahar-pyroclastic rock, granite-granite diorite, and limestone. These areas are located mainly in Sierra de Cacoma-Manantl, Sierra Verde, Sierra de Quila, Sierra de Tapalpa, and the Nevado de Colima volcanic complex. For its part, discharge areas are found mainly in the coastal plains of Jalisco and Colima, associated with Calcisol, Arenosol, Fluvisol, Planosol, Gleysol, Solonchak, and Vertisol soils, and with with halophytic-hydrophytic grassland, bulrush, and mangrove vegetation. These are located in inland-lake areas in San Marcos, Sayula, and Zapotlán. Other discharge areas are the plains and intermontane valleys of Union de Tula and Autlán-El Grullo, as well as the bottom of V-valleys in certain areas of the basin. These can act as natural hydraulic boundaries of flow systems, limiting the amount of groundwater in each zone. The lateral alternation of recharge and discharge areas implies that the water recharged in a particular region may flow to a number of discharge areas, i.e., the water discharged in a given region may come from different regions. The above has important implications in the estimation of the availability estimated from the water balance, since groundwater may flow to more than one discharge area within the same “administrative” aquifer. This type of studies are a first approach providing innovative evidence to the systemic study of groundwater, i.e., the recharge-discharge areas. Their application positively supplements the results of the water balance used in the official evaluation of groundwater availability in Mexico. 


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