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Artemi Cerdà

Researcher at University of Valencia

Publications -  399
Citations -  22358

Artemi Cerdà is an academic researcher from University of Valencia. The author has contributed to research in topics: Surface runoff & Soil water. The author has an hindex of 76, co-authored 377 publications receiving 17821 citations. Previous affiliations of Artemi Cerdà include Bar-Ilan University & University of Amsterdam.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Biological soil crusts determine soil properties and salt dynamics under arid climatic condition in Qara Qir, Iran.

TL;DR: Biological soil crusts act as a soil salinity reducing agent and contribute to the soil quality improvement under arid climatic conditions and actively used in soil rehabilitation and ecosystems restoration.
Book ChapterDOI

Soil Mapping and Processes Modeling for Sustainable Land Management

TL;DR: In this article, the advantages of using soil mapping and modeling in sustainable land use planning and management are discussed, where the authors show the importance of using such tools in the context of climate change and the increasing pressure that a growing population places on soil resources.
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Identifying barriers for nature-based solutions in flood risk management: An interdisciplinary overview using expert community approach.

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors adopt a community expert perspective to identify a set of barriers and their cascading and compound interactions relevant to individual nature-based solutions (NBSs) and identify a comprehensive set of 17 barriers affecting the implementation of 12 groups of NBS in both urban and rural settings in five European regional environmental domains (Boreal, Atlantic, Continental, Alpine-Carpathian, and Mediterranean).
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Runoff production and erosion processes on a dehesa in western spain

TL;DR: In this paper, runoff generation and soil erosion were investigated at the Guadalperalon experimental watershed (western Spain), within the land-use system known as dehesa, or open, managed evergreen forests.
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Simulated raindrop's characteristic measurements. A new approach of image processing tested under laboratory rainfall simulation

TL;DR: In this paper, a low-cost technique was developed to automatically and rapidly identify raindrop characteristics with high accuracy, which can help to calibrate other rainfall simulators, but also to characterize natural rainfall events in different regions, and the importance of the raindrop characteristic to characterize and model the soil erosion processes.