Journal ArticleDOI
Integrating water resources management in eco-hydrological modelling.
TLDR
The model was designed to simulate different reservoir management options, such as optimized hydropower production, irrigation intake from the reservoir or optimized provisioning downstream, to investigate the impacts of climate variability/change on discharge or to study possible adaptation strategies in terms of reservoir management.About:
This article is published in Water Science and Technology.The article was published on 2013-04-01. It has received 36 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Water resources & Hydropower.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Comparing impacts of climate change on streamflow in four large African river basins
Valentin Aich,Stefan Liersch,Tobias Vetter,Shaochun Huang,J. Tecklenburg,Peter Hoffmann,Hagen Koch,S. Fournet,Valentina Krysanova,Eva Nora Müller,Fred F. Hattermann +10 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare impacts of climate change on streamflow in four large representative African river basins: the Niger, the Upper Blue Nile, the Oubangui and the Limpopo.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cross‐scale intercomparison of climate change impacts simulated by regional and global hydrological models in eleven large river basins
Fred F. Hattermann,Valentina Krysanova,Simon N. Gosling,Rutger Dankers,Prasad Daggupati,Chantal Donnelly,Martina Flörke,Shaochun Huang,Yury Motovilov,S. Buda,Tao Yang,Tao Yang,Christoph Müller,Guoyong Leng,Qiuhong Tang,Felix T. Portmann,Stefan Hagemann,Dieter Gerten,Dieter Gerten,Yoshihide Wada,Yoshimitsu Masaki,Tadesse Alemayehu,Yusuke Satoh,Luis Samaniego +23 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors compare hydrological changes simulated by 9 global and 9 regional HMs for 11 large river basins in all continents under reference and scenario conditions, and find that the sensitivity to climate variability and climate change is comparable for impact models designed for either scale.
Journal ArticleDOI
Vulnerability of rice production in the Inner Niger Delta to water resources management under climate variability and change
Stefan Liersch,Jan Cools,B. Kone,Hagen Koch,Mori Diallo,Julia Reinhardt,S. Fournet,Valentin Aich,Fred F. Hattermann +8 more
TL;DR: In this article, the vulnerability of floating rice production in the Inner Niger Delta to upstream water resources management (reservoir management) and population growth under climate change and variability in the time period 2011-2050 was investigated.
Journal ArticleDOI
Modelling climate and land-use change impacts with SWIM: lessons learnt from multiple applications
Valentina Krysanova,Fred F. Hattermann,Shaochun Huang,Cornelia Hesse,Tobias Vetter,Stefan Liersch,Hagen Koch,Zbigniew W. Kundzewicz +7 more
TL;DR: The Soil and Water Integrated Model (SWIM) as discussed by the authors is a continuous-time semi-distributed ecohydrological model, integrating hydrological processes, vegetation, nutrients and erosion.
Journal ArticleDOI
Climate change impact on regional floods in the Carpathian region
Iulii Didovets,Iulii Didovets,Valentina Krysanova,Gerd Bürger,Sergiy Snizhko,Vira Balabukh,Axel Bronstert +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the impact of climate change on flood risk in the Tisza and Prut catchments, originating on the slopes of the Carpathian mountains.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
A comprehensive surface-groundwater flow model
TL;DR: In this article, a simple groundwater flow and height model was added to an existing basin-scale surface water model and validated on a 471 km2 watershed near Waco, Texas.
Journal ArticleDOI
Development and test of a spatially distributed hydrological/water quality model for mesoscale watersheds
TL;DR: The watershed model SWIM as discussed by the authors integrates hydrology, vegetation, erosion and nitrogen dynamics at the watershed scale, which can be parametrized using regionally available information using GIS-based tools.
Journal ArticleDOI
Simulation modelling of the coastal waters pollution from agricultural watershed
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors assess nonpoint nutrient pollution on an agricultural watershed and its influence on the eutrophication process in a sea-bay ecosystem using simulation modeling and analysis.
Integrating a reservoir structure into the IMS framework
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarized discussions within the Challenge project on ways forward in reservoir modeling, and laid out options for future involvement, and concluded that large synergies exist between these three options, which can be regarded as part of a multi-stage software development.