Search results for "Runoff"

showing 10 items of 294 documents

Bacterial Diversity in a Dynamic and Extreme Sub-Arctic Watercourse (Pasvik River, Norwegian Arctic)

2020

Microbial communities promptly respond to the environmental perturbations, especially in the Arctic and sub-Arctic systems that are highly impacted by climate change, and fluctuations in the diversity level of microbial assemblages could give insights on their expected response. 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing was applied to describe the bacterial community composition in water and sediment through the sub-Arctic Pasvik River. Our results showed that river water and sediment harbored distinct communities in terms of diversity and composition at genus level. The distribution of the bacterial communities was mainly affected by both salinity and temperature in sediment samples, and by oxygen…

lcsh:Hydraulic engineeringGeography Planning and DevelopmentClimate changesedimentitAquatic ScienceBiochemistryAlgal bloombakteerit03 medical and health scienceslcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposeslcsh:TC1-978Glacial period030304 developmental biologyWater Science and TechnologyPhylotypearktinen aluelcsh:TD201-5000303 health sciences030306 microbiologyEcologyvesiekosysteemitbacterial diversityriver sediment and waterSedimentmikrobiekologiaSalinitymikrobistoTaxonvirtavedetNGSsub-Arctic systemEnvironmental scienceSurface runoffjoetWater
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Tillage Versus No-Tillage. Soil Properties and Hydrology in an Organic Persimmon Farm in Eastern Iberian Peninsula

2020

There is an urgent need to implement environmentally friendly agriculture management practices to achieve the Sustainable Goals for Development (SDGs) of the United Nations by 2030. Mediterranean agriculture is characterized by intense and millennia-old tillage management and as a consequence degraded soil. No-Tillage has been widely examined as a solution for soil degradation but No-Tillage relies more on the application of herbicides that reduce plant cover, which in turn enhances soil erosion. However, No-Tillage with weed cover should be researched to promote organic farming and sustainable agriculture. Therefore, we compare Tillage against No-Tillage using weed cover as an alternative …

lcsh:Hydraulic engineeringGeography Planning and Developmentrunoff010501 environmental sciencesAquatic Science01 natural sciencesBiochemistryTillagesoillcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposeslcsh:TC1-978Soil retrogression and degradationSustainable agricultureweedsNo-Tillage0105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technologylcsh:TD201-500rainfall simulation04 agricultural and veterinary scienceserosionSettore AGR/02 - Agronomia E Coltivazioni ErbaceepersimmonTillageAgronomySoil waterINGENIERIA CARTOGRAFICA GEODESIA Y FOTOGRAMETRIA040103 agronomy & agricultureOrganic farmingErosion0401 agriculture forestry and fisheriesEnvironmental sciencePlant coverSurface runoffweedIberian PeninsulaWater
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Comparative Analyses between the Zero-Inertia and Fully Dynamic Models of the Shallow Water Equations for Unsteady Overland Flow Propagation

2018

The shallow water equations are a mathematical tool widely applied for the simulation of flow routing in rivers and floodplains, as well as for flood inundation mapping. The interest of many researchers has been focused on the study of simplified forms of the original set of equations. One of the most commonly applied simplifications consists of neglecting the inertial terms. The effects of such a choice on the outputs of the simulations of flooding events are controversial and are an important topic of debate. In the present paper, two numerical models recently proposed for the solution of the complete and zero-inertia forms of the shallow water equations, are applied to several unsteady f…

lcsh:Hydraulic engineeringInertial frame of referencemedia_common.quotation_subject0208 environmental biotechnologyGeography Planning and Development02 engineering and technologyAquatic ScienceInertiaBiochemistryoverland flow routingSettore ICAR/01 - IdraulicaPhysics::Fluid Dynamicslcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposeslcsh:TC1-978Geotechnical engineeringmodels comparisonShallow water equationsinertial termsshallow water equations models comparison fully dynamic model zero-inertia model inertial terms overland flow routingWater Science and Technologymedia_commonlcsh:TD201-500shallow water equationszero-inertia modelMathematical modelcivil_engineeringZero (complex analysis)Mechanicsfully dynamic model020801 environmental engineeringFlooding (computer networking)shallow water equations; models comparison; fully dynamic model; zero-inertia model; inertial terms; overland flow routingGeographyDynamic modelsSurface runoffGeologyFlow routingWater
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A Self-Contained and Automated Method for Flood Hazard Maps Prediction in Urban Areas

2020

Water depths and velocities predicted inside urban areas during severe storms are traditionally the final result of a chain of hydrologic and hydraulic models. The use of a single model embedding all the components of the rainfall&ndash

lcsh:TD201-500lcsh:Hydraulic engineeringFlood mythHydrological modellingNode (networking)Geography Planning and DevelopmentElevationAquatic ScienceBiochemistryRegular gridTriangulated irregular networkSettore ICAR/01 - Idraulicaflood mappingflood mappinglcsh:Water supply for domestic and industrial purposeslcsh:TC1-978Contour lineintegrated modellingrunoff quantity controlDigital elevation modelrunoff quantity controlGeologyWater Science and TechnologyRemote sensing
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Terrestrial Inputs Drive Seasonality in Organic Matter and Nutrient Biogeochemistry in a High Arctic Fjord System (Isfjorden, Svalbard)

2020

Climate-change driven increases in temperature and precipitation are leading to increased discharge of freshwater and terrestrial material to Arctic coastal ecosystems. These inputs bring sediments, nutrients and organic matter (OM) across the land-ocean interface with a range of implications for coastal ecosystems and biogeochemical cycling. To investigate responses to terrestrial inputs, physicochemical conditions were characterized in a river- and glacier-influenced Arctic fjord system (Isfjorden, Svalbard) from May to August in 2018 and 2019. Our observations revealed a pervasive freshwater footprint in the inner fjord arms, the geochemical properties of which varied spatially and seaso…

light climate0106 biological sciencesBiogeochemical cyclelcsh:QH1-199.5010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesFreshetOcean EngineeringFjordlcsh:General. Including nature conservation geographical distributionAquatic ScienceOceanographyPermafrost01 natural sciencesOrganic matterlcsh:Sciencecoastal biogeochemistryVDP::Landbruks- og Fiskerifag: 900::Fiskerifag: 920VDP::Mathematics and natural science: 4000105 earth and related environmental sciencesWater Science and Technologychemistry.chemical_classificationGlobal and Planetary Changegeographygeography.geographical_feature_category010604 marine biology & hydrobiologyAquatic ecosystemfreshwater inputsBiogeochemistryVDP::Matematikk og Naturvitenskap: 400dissolved organic matterglacier runoffclimate changeOceanographychemistryArcticEnvironmental sciencelcsh:Q
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Monthly precipitation and runoff series of Begura de Salma River (Mallorca, Spain): January 2015-October 2018

2020

Here we provide the data set obtained as described in detail in Estrany et al. (2020, doi:10.5194/nhess-2019-304); a brief description is presented below. A hydrometric gauging station is located where the Begura de Salma River enters Sant Llorenç des Cardassar, a village located in the northeastern part of Mallorca island (Spain). The station was built by the water authority in the 1970s. After years of abandonment, in 2015 the MEDhyCON Research Group installed within the gauge house a Hobo Water Level U20L-04, which measures the water stage by 1-minute readings, accumulating 15-minute average values. The station is located at the very beginning of the concrete channel that takes the river…

monthly totalRunoffcatastrophic flash-floodsMonthPrecipitation annual totalPrecipitationGauge stationannual totalDATE/TIMEPrecipitation monthly totalDischarge maximumPeriodDATE TIMEEarth System ResearchDischargeMediterranean fluvial systemscatastrophic flash floodsmaximum
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Modeling the probability distribution of peak discharge for infiltrating hillslopes

2017

Hillslope response plays a fundamental role in the prediction of peak discharge at the basin outlet. The peak discharge for the critical duration of rainfall and its probability distribution are needed for designing urban infrastructure facilities. This study derives the probability distribution, denoted as GABS model, by coupling three models: (1) the Green-Ampt model for computing infiltration, (2) the kinematic wave model for computing discharge hydrograph from the hillslope, and (3) the intensity-duration-frequency (IDF) model for computing design rainfall intensity. The Hortonian mechanism for runoff generation is employed for computing the surface runoff hydrograph. Since the antecede…

peak discharge probability distributionGreen-Ampt modelhillslope scaleSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestalihydrologic responserunoff coefficientWater Science and Technology
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Runoff coefficients to predict peak discharge at hillslope scale: A small contribution to theoretical hydrology

2018

The science of hydrology holds a central role in the field of environmental Earth science, being intimately connected to meteorology, climatology, hydrogeology and ecology. In particular, the knowledge of hillslope hydrology is fundamental for understanding the flood phenomenon, for predicting the peak discharge and its probability distribution, which is necessary in many practical applications (design of hydraulic structures, urban, extra-urban planning, etc.). Using different approaches, there have been a multitude of studies on the hydrologic response at hillslope scale. One approach for deriving the hillslope response utilizes, in a distributed form, the differential equations of unstea…

peak discharge runoff coefficient kinematic wave model Green-Ampt modelSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestali
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IMPIEGO DEL CONTENUTO IDRICO DEL SUOLO E DEL DEFLUSSO SUPERFICIALE PER LA STIMA DELLA PERDITA DI SUOLO PARCELLARE A SCALA DI EVENTO

2016

Nel presente lavoro viene valutata la potenzialità di accoppiare la USLE con il contenuto d’acqua del suolo pre-evento o il deflusso stimato, per migliorare l’accuratezza della stima della perdita di suolo a scala di singolo evento erosivo. A tale scopo sono stati utilizzati due approcci per i quali la perdita di suolo e il fattore di erosività sono legati da una legge di potenza. Il primo è il modello USLE-MM con deflusso stimato da un modello afflussi deflussi, SCRRM, che importa dati di contenuto d’acqua. Il secondo approccio è quello del modello SM4E che utilizza i dati di contenuto d’acqua pre-evento per correggere il fattore di erosività della pioggia. I due modelli sono stati testati…

remote sensingsoil erosionmodelli idrologicideflusso parcellareSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-Forestalirunoffcontenuto idrico del suolosoil moistureperdita di suolo parcellaresoil erosion runoff soil moisture remote sensing
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Effective Practices in Mitigating Soil Erosion from Fields

2017

Soil erosion by water is a natural process that cannot be avoided. Soil erosion depends on many factors, and a distinction should be made between humanly unchangeable (e.g., rainfall) and modifiable (e.g., length of the field) soil erosion factors. Soil erosion has both on-site and off-site effects. Soil conservation tries to combine modifiable factors so as to maintain erosion in an area of interest to an acceptable level. Strategies to control soil erosion have to be adapted to the desired land use. Knowledge of soil loss tolerance, T, i.e., the maximum admissible erosion from a given field, allows technicians or farmers to establish whether soil conservation practices need to be applied …

soil erosion soil loss tolerance on-site and off-site erosion impacts soil conservation burned areas erosion modeling for soil conservationSoil biodiversityAgroforestrycomplex mixturesSoil managementNo-till farmingEnvironmental protectionSoil functionsSoil retrogression and degradationEnvironmental scienceSettore AGR/08 - Idraulica Agraria E Sistemazioni Idraulico-ForestaliDryland salinitySoil conservationSurface runoff
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