“…Other studies have observed increases in groundwater recharge or base flow with urbanization that is credited to water supply pipe leakage [ Lerner , ], reduced evapotranspiration, focused recharge of storm water infiltration [ Ku et al ., ; Appleyard , ; Stephens et al ., ; Hogan et al ., ], recovery from industrial groundwater pumping [ Vázquez‐Suñé et al ., ], or discharge of wastewater from imported or confined water supply [ Burns et al ., ; Townsend‐Small et al ., ]. Where a range of these features was present and the increases and decreases nearly balanced out, or the effects on urban development were small compared to predevelopment recharge, little effect was observed from urban development on groundwater recharge or base flow [ Ferguson and Suckling , ; Barringer et al ., ; Yang et al ., ; Kim et al ., ; Trowsdale and Lerner , ; Brandes et al ., ; Meyer , ; Roy et al ., ]. The effect of any given city on groundwater levels will likely vary over time as the city develops [ Kennedy et al ., ].…”