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Catchments as reactors: a comprehensive approach for water fluxes and solute turnover

Authors :
Peter Grathwohl
Hermann Rügner
Thomas Wöhling
Karsten Osenbrück
Marc Schwientek
Sebastian Gayler
Ute Wollschläger
Benny Selle
Marion Pause
Jens-Olaf Delfs
Matthias Grzeschik
Ulrich Weller
Martin Ivanov
Olaf A. Cirpka
Ulrich Maier
Bertram Kuch
Wolfgang Nowak
Volker Wulfmeyer
Kirsten Warrach-Sagi
Thilo Streck
Sabine Attinger
Lars Bilke
Peter Dietrich
Jan H. Fleckenstein
Thomas Kalbacher
Olaf Kolditz
Karsten Rink
Luis Samaniego
Hans-Jörg Vogel
Ulrike Werban
Georg Teutsch
Source :
Environmental Earth Sciences. 69:317-333
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2013.

Abstract

Sustainable water quality management requires a profound understanding of water fluxes (precipitation, run-off, recharge, etc.) and solute turnover such as retention, reaction, transformation, etc. at the catchment or landscape scale. The Water and Earth System Science competence cluster (WESS, http://www.wess.info/ ) aims at a holistic analysis of the water cycle coupled to reactive solute transport, including soil–plant–atmosphere and groundwater–surface water interactions. To facilitate exploring the impact of land-use and climate changes on water cycling and water quality, special emphasis is placed on feedbacks between the atmosphere, the land surface, and the subsurface. A major challenge lies in bridging the scales in monitoring and modeling of surface/subsurface versus atmospheric processes. The field work follows the approach of contrasting catchments, i.e. neighboring watersheds with different land use or similar watersheds with different climate. This paper introduces the featured catchments and explains methodologies of WESS by selected examples.

Details

ISSN :
18666299 and 18666280
Volume :
69
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Environmental Earth Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........77fcd527b6e2b3bb2b71a2a80d027253