Can New Mexico’s ancient water system survive climate change?
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Those irrigation ditches, scattered across the state and known as acequias (pronounced ah-SEH-kee-ahs), have endured for hundreds of years. For Maestas and other residents in Albuquerque's South Valley, the communal irrigation system is an integral part of life in one of the country's most arid regions.
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"There's a distinction between an acequia and a canal and a ditch," said José Rivera, a research scholar who has long studied acequia culture. "Acequia has a connotation about it that it's both a physical system, just like a canal or just like a ditch. But acequia also means it's a social organization of irrigators. It's a community of irrigators."
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There's already evidence that the changes in temperatures are causing the snowmelt that fills acequias to happen earlier in the spring, which complicates irrigation, said Alexander "Sam" Fernald, director of the New Mexico State University's New Mexico Water Resources Research Institute. This means depleted flows in the summer, when the demand for water soars.
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Although acequias lose a good amount of water to evaporation when they soak crops and gardens through flood irrigation, studies show that their hydrology provides benefits to the environment that may actually help counter the loss. For example, Fernald's research found that seepage - which can range from about 7 to more than 50 percent of the flow - recharges the aquifer and eventually returns to the river. "Acequias also provide many benefits for riparian habitats," he said.
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