Weekly Literature Review

Week 22 · May 29–June 4, 2023

50 relevant papers found across 5 themes

Executive Summary

This week’s review covers 50 papers across 5 themes. The most cited paper examines Safe and just Earth system boundaries, with 1180 citations. Key research areas include climate change and terrestrial water storage, flood risk assessment and extreme precipitation, machine learning and ai for hydrological prediction.


Table of Contents

  1. Executive Summary
  2. Climate Change and Terrestrial Water Storage
    1. Fresh Water availability and Its Global challenge
    2. An improved global vegetation health index dataset in detecting vegetation drought
    3. An evaluation framework for downscaling and bias correction in climate change impact studies
    4. Using urban building energy modeling to quantify the energy performance of residential buildings under climate change
    5. Residential segregation and outdoor urban moist heat stress disparities in the United States
    6. Revisiting the linkage between financial inclusion and energy productivity: Technology implications for climate change
    7. Attribution of climate change and human activities to vegetation NDVI in Jilin Province, China during 1998–2020
    8. Seasonal catchment memory of high mountain rivers in the Tibetan Plateau
    9. Global Warming Status in the African Continent: Sources, Challenges, Policies, and Future Direction
    10. Extreme atmospheric rivers in a warming climate
    11. Human activities impact the propagation from meteorological to hydrological drought in the Yellow River Basin, China
    12. Increasingly negative tropical water–interannual CO2 growth rate coupling
    13. Morpho-physiological responses and growth indices of triticale to drought and salt stresses
    14. Effects of climate change and anthropogenic activities on soil pH in grassland regions on the Tibetan Plateau
    15. Characteristics and Mechanisms of Typhoon‐Induced Decomposition of Organic Matter and Its Implication for Climate Change
    16. Managing water across the flood-drought spectrum – experiences from and challenges for the Netherlands
    17. Modeling Future Hydrological Characteristics Based on Land Use/Land Cover and Climate Changes Using the SWAT Model
    18. Eco-tourism, climate change, and environmental policies: empirical evidence from developing economies
    19. Multivariate analysis compares and evaluates drought and flooding tolerances of maize germplasm
  3. Flood Risk Assessment and Extreme Precipitation
    1. Glacial lake outburst floods threaten Asia’s infrastructure
  4. Machine Learning and AI for Hydrological Prediction
    1. A Hybrid CNN-LSTM Approach for Monthly Reservoir Inflow Forecasting
    2. Metaheuristic evolutionary deep learning model based on temporal convolutional network, improved aquila optimizer and random forest for rainfall-runoff simulation and multi-step runoff prediction
    3. Evaluation of Transformer model and Self-Attention mechanism in the Yangtze River basin runoff prediction
    4. Prediction of flow discharge in Mahanadi River Basin, India, based on novel hybrid SVM approaches
    5. Rip Current Segmentation: A Novel Benchmark and YOLOv8 Baseline Results
    6. Towards deep probabilistic graph neural network for natural gas leak detection and localization without labeled anomaly data
    7. A data-driven model for water quality prediction in Tai Lake, China, using secondary modal decomposition with multidimensional external features
  5. Water Management, Irrigation, and Groundwater
    1. Use of Treated Sewage or wastewater as an Irrigation Water for Agricultural Purposes- Environmental, Health, and Economic Impacts
    2. Impacts of long-term saline water irrigation on soil properties and crop yields under maize-wheat crop rotation
    3. Pathways to water sustainability? A global study assessing the benefits of integrated water resources management
    4. Water Management for Sustainable Irrigation in Rice (Oryza sativa L.) Production: A Review
    5. Groundwater–surface water interaction in Denmark
  6. Hydrological Processes, Snow Dynamics, and Remote Sensing
    1. Safe and just Earth system boundaries
    2. Going beyond efficiency for solar evaporation
    3. Improving daily streamflow simulations for data-scarce watersheds using the coupled SWAT-LSTM approach
    4. Redox Oscillations Activate Thermodynamically Stable Iron Minerals for Enhanced Reactive Oxygen Species Production
    5. River plastic transport and deposition amplified by extreme flood
    6. Compositional reservoir simulation of underground hydrogen storage in depleted gas reservoirs
    7. Developing a Physics‐Informed Deep Learning Model to Simulate Runoff Response to Climate Change in Alpine Catchments
    8. The Impact of Meteorological Forcing Uncertainty on Hydrological Modeling: A Global Analysis of Cryosphere Basins
    9. Practice and development suggestions of hydraulic fracturing technology in the Gulong shale oil reservoirs of Songliao Basin, NE China
    10. Rare earth elements (REEs) behavior in a large river across a geological and anthropogenic gradient
    11. Microbial community assembly responses to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon contamination across water and sediment habitats in the Pearl River Estuary
    12. Offshore aquaculture in China
    13. Utilizing the strategic concession behavior in a bargaining game for optimal allocation of water in a transboundary river basin during water bankruptcy
    14. The choroid plexus acts as an immune cell reservoir and brain entry site in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis
    15. Runoff variations affected by climate change and human activities in Yarlung Zangbo River, southeastern Tibetan Plateau
    16. A distributed hydrological model for semi-humid watersheds with a thick unsaturated zone under strong anthropogenic impacts: A case study in Haihe River Basin
    17. From Soil to River: Revealing the Mechanisms Underlying the High Riverine Nitrate Levels in a Forest Dominated Catchment
    18. Wind– and Sea‐Ice–Driven Interannual Variability of Antarctic Bottom Water Formation
  7. Statistics
    1. Papers by journal
  8. Filtering Criteria

Climate Change and Terrestrial Water Storage

This week features 19 papers examining the intersection of climate change and terrestrial water dynamics. Studies investigate water storage changes, drought mechanisms and projections, vegetation-water interactions, and Earth system model uncertainties. Key contributions address large-scale water storage trends, land-atmosphere coupling effects on drought onset, and methods for characterizing future drought under climate change scenarios.

Fresh Water availability and Its Global challenge

Authors: Rakesh Kumar Mishra

Journal: British Journal of Multidisciplinary and Advanced Studies · DOI: 10.37745/bjmas.2022.0208 · Citations: 513

Matched topics: hydrology, surface water

Water is prime natural resources fulfilling our needs in a precisious assets.we must acts to preserve and utilize every drop of water.water resources can be assessed on the basis of surface and subsurface water bodies.Climate change impact on ground Water the impact of climate change on ground water has been studied much less than the impact on surface waters. Ground water reacts to climate change mainly due to change in ground water recharge,but also change in river level in response to incr…


An improved global vegetation health index dataset in detecting vegetation drought

Authors: J. Zeng, Tao Zhou, Yanping Qu, Virgílio A. Bento, Junyu Qi, Yixin Xu et al.

Journal: Scientific Data · DOI: 10.1038/s41597-023-02255-3 · Citations: 96

Matched topics: drought

Due to global warming, drought events have become more frequent, which resulted in aggravated crop failures, food shortage, larger and more energetic wildfires, and have seriously affected socio-economic development and agricultural production. In this study, a global long-term (1981–2021), high-resolution (4 km) improved vegetation health index (VHI) dataset integrating climate, vegetation and soil moisture was developed. Based on drought records from the Emergency Event Database, we compare…


An evaluation framework for downscaling and bias correction in climate change impact studies

Authors: Elisabeth Vogel, Fiona Johnson, Lucy Marshall, Ulrike Bende‐Michl, Louise Wilson, Justin Peter et al.

Journal: Journal of Hydrology · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.129693 · Citations: 72

Matched topics: hydrologic model, runoff, climate change

Climate change impact studies commonly use impact models (such as hydrological or crop models) forced with corrected climate input data from global climate models. A range of downscaling and bias correction methods have been developed to increase the spatial resolution and remove systematic biases in climate model outputs to be applied before use in impact models. Many studies have focused on evaluating such approaches for the climate variables they aim to correct. However, due to nonlinear e…


Using urban building energy modeling to quantify the energy performance of residential buildings under climate change

Authors: Deng Zhang, Kavan Javanroodi, Vahid M. Nik, Yixing Chen

Journal: Building Simulation · DOI: 10.1007/s12273-023-1032-2 · Citations: 80

Matched topics: climate change

Abstract not available.


Residential segregation and outdoor urban moist heat stress disparities in the United States

Authors: TC Chakraborty, Andrew J. Newman, Yun Qian, Angel Hsu, Glenn Sheriff

Journal: One Earth · DOI: 10.1016/j.oneear.2023.05.016 · Citations: 74

Matched topics: land surface model

The combined impact of urbanization-induced warming and drying on large-scale heat stress disparities remains unknown, with multicity studies using satellite-derived land surface temperature as a proxy for these disparities. Here, using high-resolution urban-resolving numerical model simulations for 2014–2018, we find pervasive disparities in all-sky average maximum summertime air temperature and moist heat stress metrics across US cities, with higher outdoor heat stress exposure in poorer an…


Revisiting the linkage between financial inclusion and energy productivity: Technology implications for climate change

Authors: Chengting Zheng, Hongxi Chen

Journal: Sustainable Energy Technologies and Assessments · DOI: 10.1016/j.seta.2023.103275 · Citations: 74

Matched topics: climate change

Abstract not available.


Attribution of climate change and human activities to vegetation NDVI in Jilin Province, China during 1998–2020

Authors: Yating Ren, Feng Zhang, Chunli Zhao, Zhiqiang Cheng

Journal: Ecological Indicators · DOI: 10.1016/j.ecolind.2023.110415 · Citations: 71

Matched topics: climate change

Vegetation is among the key elements of ecosystems, and the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) is among the most frequently used tools for studying changes in regional vegetation dynamics. Studying these changes and their drivers is essential for understanding the interactions between vegetation and ecosystems; therefore, here, we analyzed the spatial and temporal patterns of NDVI in Jilin Province and their influencing factors. The correlation between NDVI and climatic factors was…


Seasonal catchment memory of high mountain rivers in the Tibetan Plateau

Authors: Haiting Gu, Yue‐Ping Xu, Li Liu, Jingkai Xie, Lu Wang, Suli Pan et al.

Journal: Nature Communications · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38966-9 · Citations: 56

Matched topics: hydrology, river, streamflow, seasonal

Rivers originating in the Tibetan Plateau are crucial to the population in Asia. However, research about quantifying seasonal catchment memory of these rivers is still limited. Here, we propose a model able to accurately estimate terrestrial water storage change (TWSC), and characterize catchment memory processes and durations using the memory curve and the influence/domination time, respectively. By investigating eight representative basins of the region, we find that the seasonal catchment …


Global Warming Status in the African Continent: Sources, Challenges, Policies, and Future Direction

Authors: Heba Bedair, Mubaraka S. Alghariani, Esraa Omar, Quadri A. Anibaba, Michael Remon, Charné Bornman et al.

Journal: International Journal of Environmental Research · DOI: 10.1007/s41742-023-00534-w · Citations: 67

Matched topics: runoff

Abstract Africa is the second largest continent after Asia, having a larger than 30 million km 2 area. Doubtlessly, one of the biggest ecological and societal problems of the twenty-first century is climate change. Since the early 1970s, it has been clear that Africa is already experiencing the effects of climate change, and it has given rise to a wide range of new and unusual phenomena, such as rising temperatures, poor agricultural output, extreme different weather scenarios, and the spread…


Extreme atmospheric rivers in a warming climate

Authors: Shuyu Wang, Xiaohui Ma, Shenghui Zhou, Lixin Wu, Hong Wang, Zhili Tang et al.

Journal: Nature Communications · DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-38980-x · Citations: 62

Matched topics: river, earth system model

Extreme atmospheric rivers (EARs) are responsible for most of the severe precipitation and disastrous flooding along the coastal regions in midlatitudes. However, the current non-eddy-resolving climate models severely underestimate (~50%) EARs, casting significant uncertainties on their future projections. Here, using an unprecedented set of eddy-resolving high-resolution simulations from the Community Earth System Model simulations, we show that the models’ ability of simulating EARs is sign…


Human activities impact the propagation from meteorological to hydrological drought in the Yellow River Basin, China

Authors: Qi Zhang, Chiyuan Miao, Xiaoying Guo, Jiaojiao Gou, Ting Su

Journal: Journal of Hydrology · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.129752 · Citations: 54

Matched topics: river, streamflow, drought

Abstract not available.


Increasingly negative tropical water–interannual CO2 growth rate coupling

Authors: Laibao Liu, Philippe Ciais, Mengxi Wu, Ryan S. Padrón, Pierre Friedlingstein, Jonas Schwaab et al.

Journal: Nature · DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06056-x · Citations: 58

Matched topics: land surface model, earth system model

. We also demonstrate that most state-of-the-art coupled Earth System and Land Surface models do not reproduce the intensifying water-carbon coupling. Our results indicate that tropical water availability is increasingly controlling the interannual variability of the terrestrial carbon cycle and modulating tropical terrestrial carbon-climate feedbacks.


Morpho-physiological responses and growth indices of triticale to drought and salt stresses

Authors: Soheyla Mohammadi Alagoz, Hashem Hadi, Mahmoud Toorchi, Tomasz Andrzej Pawłowski, Behnam Asgari Lajayer, G.W. Price et al.

Journal: Scientific Reports · DOI: 10.1038/s41598-023-36119-y · Citations: 62

Matched topics: drought

Salinity and drought are two major abiotic stresses challenging global crop production and food security. In this study, the effects of individual and combined effects of drought (at different phenological stages) and salt stresses on growth, morphology, and physiology of triticale were evaluated. For this purpose, a 3 x 4 factorial design in three blocks experiment was conducted. The stress treatments included three levels of salinity (0, 50, and 100 mM NaCl) and four levels of drought (regu…


Effects of climate change and anthropogenic activities on soil pH in grassland regions on the Tibetan Plateau

Authors: Wei Sun, Shaowei Li, Guangyu Zhang, Gang Fu, Huxiao Qi, Tianyu Li

Journal: Global Ecology and Conservation · DOI: 10.1016/j.gecco.2023.e02532 · Citations: 61

Matched topics: climate change

Although soil pH is an important indicator of soil quality, the effects of climate change and anthropogenic activities on soil pH remain controversial. Here, we quantified the potential soil pH at three depths (0–10, 10–20, and 20–30 cm) using annual temperature (AT), annual precipitation (AP) and annual radiation (ARad), and the actual soil pH at three depths using AT, AP, ARad and maximum normalized difference vegetation index based on random forest models over the grassland regions on the …


Characteristics and Mechanisms of Typhoon‐Induced Decomposition of Organic Matter and Its Implication for Climate Change

Authors: Qibin Lao, Fajin Chen, Guangzhe Jin, Xuan Lu, Chunqing Chen, Xin Zhou et al.

Journal: Journal of Geophysical Research Biogeosciences · DOI: 10.1029/2023jg007518 · Citations: 60

Matched topics: climate change

Abstract We recently reported that decomposition (as a carbon source) of organic matter (OM) is the dominant process in coastal waters after typhoons, which is contrary to phytoplankton blooms (as a carbon sink) in previous studies. However, the characteristics and mechanisms of typhoon‐induced decomposition and the question whether the decomposition mainly decompose particulate OM (POM) or dissolved OM (DOM) are still unclear. To address these issues, physicochemical parameters and multiple …


Managing water across the flood-drought spectrum – experiences from and challenges for the Netherlands

Authors: Ruud P. Bartholomeus, Karin van der Wiel, Anne F. Van Loon, Marjolein H.J. van Huijgevoort, Michelle T. H. van Vliet, Marjolein Mens et al.

Journal: Cambridge Prisms Water · DOI: 10.1017/wat.2023.4 · Citations: 45

Matched topics: hydrology, water management, flood, drought

Recent impactful hydrometeorological events, on both the extreme wet and dry side of the spectrum, remind policymakers and citizens that climate change is a reality and that a shift in water management solutions is required. A selection of policy-shaping events in the Netherlands shows that both floods and droughts have occurred historically and continue to occur, causing significant impacts and challenges for water resources management. For decades, water management in the Netherlands has fo…


Modeling Future Hydrological Characteristics Based on Land Use/Land Cover and Climate Changes Using the SWAT Model

Authors: Maryam Abbaszadeh, Ommolbanin Bazrafshan, Rasool Mahdavi, Elham Rafiei Sardooi, Sajad Jamshidi

Journal: Water Resources Management · DOI: 10.1007/s11269-023-03545-6 · Citations: 49

Matched topics: hydrologic model, streamflow, climate change

Abstract not available.


Eco-tourism, climate change, and environmental policies: empirical evidence from developing economies

Authors: Yunfeng Shang, Chunyu Bi, Xinyu Wei, Dayang Jiang, Farhad Taghizadeh–Hesary, Ehsan Rasoulinezhad

Journal: Humanities and Social Sciences Communications · DOI: 10.1057/s41599-023-01777-w · Citations: 56

Matched topics: climate change

Developing ecotourism services is a suitable solution to help developing countries improve the status of sustainable development indicators and protect their environment. The primary purpose of this paper is to find out the effects of green governance variables and carbon dioxide emissions on ecotourism for 40 developing economies from 2010 to 2021. The results confirmed a uni-directional causal relationship between the green governance indicator and the inflation rate of the ecotourism indic…


Multivariate analysis compares and evaluates drought and flooding tolerances of maize germplasm

Authors: Guo Yun Wang, Shakeel Ahmad, Yong Wang, Bing Wei Wang, Jing Huang, Mohammad Shah Jahan et al.

Journal: PLANT PHYSIOLOGY · DOI: 10.1093/plphys/kiad317 · Citations: 44

Matched topics: flood, drought

Drought and flooding are the two most important environmental factors limiting maize (Zea mays L.) production globally. This study aimed to investigate the physiological mechanisms and accurate evaluation indicators and methods of maize germplasm involved in drought and flooding stresses. The twice replicated pot experiments with 60 varieties, combined with the field validation experiment with 3 varieties, were conducted under well-watered, drought, and flooding conditions. Most varieties exh…


Flood Risk Assessment and Extreme Precipitation

Flood risk assessment and extreme precipitation research are well represented this week with 1 papers advancing methodologies for flood susceptibility mapping, early warning systems, and resilience evaluation. Multiple studies employ GIS-based multi-criteria approaches and machine learning methods for spatial flood hazard assessment across diverse regions. Research also addresses the social dimensions of flood preparedness and strategic planning for flood mitigation.

Glacial lake outburst floods threaten Asia’s infrastructure

Authors: Yong Nie, Qian Deng, Hamish D. Pritchard, Jonathan L. Carrivick, Farooq Ahmed, Christian Huggel et al.

Journal: Science Bulletin · DOI: 10.1016/j.scib.2023.05.035 · Citations: 50

Matched topics: flood, hydropower

Abstract not available.


Machine Learning and AI for Hydrological Prediction

This week’s 7 papers demonstrate continued momentum in applying machine learning and artificial intelligence to hydrological prediction challenges. Contributions span groundwater level forecasting, streamflow prediction, river flow modeling, and physics-informed approaches that integrate domain knowledge with data-driven methods. Notable advances include uncertainty quantification in ML predictions and optimization of model architectures for improved hydrological forecasting.

A Hybrid CNN-LSTM Approach for Monthly Reservoir Inflow Forecasting

Authors: Saeed Khorram, Nima Jehbez

Journal: Water Resources Management · DOI: 10.1007/s11269-023-03541-w · Citations: 69

Matched topics: hydrologic model, reservoir

Abstract not available.


Metaheuristic evolutionary deep learning model based on temporal convolutional network, improved aquila optimizer and random forest for rainfall-runoff simulation and multi-step runoff prediction

Authors: Xiujie Qiao, Tian Peng, Na Sun, Chu Zhang, Qianlong Liu, Yue Zhang et al.

Journal: Expert systems with applications · DOI: 10.1016/j.eswa.2023.120616 · Citations: 70

Matched topics: runoff

Abstract not available.


Evaluation of Transformer model and Self-Attention mechanism in the Yangtze River basin runoff prediction

Authors: Xikun Wei, Guojie Wang, Britta Schmalz, Daniel Fiifi Tawia Hagan, Zheng Duan

Journal: Journal of Hydrology Regional Studies · DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrh.2023.101438 · Citations: 55

Matched topics: river, runoff

In the Yangtze River basin of China. We applied a recently popular deep learning (DL) algorithm, Transformer (TSF), and two commonly used DL methods, Long-Short-Term Memory (LSTM) and Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU), to evaluate the performance of TSF in predicting runoff in the Yangtze River basin. We also add the main structure of TSF, Self-Attention (SA), to the LSTM and GRU models, namely LSTM-SA and GRU-SA, to investigate whether the inclusion of the SA mechanism can improve the prediction ca…


Prediction of flow discharge in Mahanadi River Basin, India, based on novel hybrid SVM approaches

Authors: Sandeep Samantaray, Abinash Sahoo

Journal: Environment Development and Sustainability · DOI: 10.1007/s10668-023-03412-9 · Citations: 57

Matched topics: hydrologic model, river

Abstract not available.


Rip Current Segmentation: A Novel Benchmark and YOLOv8 Baseline Results

Authors: Andrei Dumitriu, Florin Tătui, Florin Miron, Radu Tudor Ionescu, Radu Timofte

Journal: ** · DOI: 10.1109/cvprw59228.2023.00133 · Citations: 54

Matched topics: surface water

Rip currents are the leading cause of fatal accidents and injuries on many beaches worldwide, emphasizing the importance of automatically detecting these hazardous surface water currents. In this paper, we address a novel task: rip current instance segmentation. We introduce a comprehensive dataset containing 2,466 images with newly created polygonal annotations for instance segmentation, used for training and validation. Additionally, we present a novel dataset comprising 17 drone videos (co…


Towards deep probabilistic graph neural network for natural gas leak detection and localization without labeled anomaly data

Authors: Xinqi Zhang, Jihao Shi, Xinyan Huang, Fu Xiao, Ming Yang, Jiawei Huang et al.

Journal: Expert Systems with Applications · DOI: 10.1016/j.eswa.2023.120542 · Citations: 49

Matched topics: streamflow

Abstract not available.


A data-driven model for water quality prediction in Tai Lake, China, using secondary modal decomposition with multidimensional external features

Authors: Rui Tan, Zhaocai Wang, Tunhua Wu, Tunhua Wu

Journal: Journal of Hydrology Regional Studies · DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrh.2023.101435 · Citations: 48

Matched topics: water management

Tai Lake, the third largest freshwater lake in China, with a history of serious ecological pollution incidents. Lake water quality prediction techniques are essential to ensure an early emergency response capability for sustainable water management. Herein, an effective data-driven ensemble model was developed for predicting lake dissolved oxygen (DO) based on meteorological factors, water quality indicators and spatial information. First, variation mode decomposition (VMD) was used to decomp…


Water Management, Irrigation, and Groundwater

Water management research this week spans 5 papers covering integrated water resources management, irrigation scheduling, groundwater monitoring, and water-energy-food nexus analyses. Studies range from global-scale assessments to site-specific irrigation optimization, with particular attention to satellite-based monitoring of water use and land subsidence from groundwater extraction.

Use of Treated Sewage or wastewater as an Irrigation Water for Agricultural Purposes- Environmental, Health, and Economic Impacts

Authors: Soma Mishra, Rakesh Kumar, M. Nireekshan Kumar

Journal: Total Environment Research Themes · DOI: 10.1016/j.totert.2023.100051 · Citations: 188

Matched topics: irrigation

Reusing sewage water for crop irrigation becomes necessary due to freshwater scarcity, and groundwater depletion. Although the suitability of using treated sewage for crop irrigation remains a topic of argument among government authorities and policymakers. In light of this, this review article summarizes the present global situation and techniques for recycling and application of treated sewage water in agriculture. This paper highlights the environmental, health, and economic impacts of usi…


Impacts of long-term saline water irrigation on soil properties and crop yields under maize-wheat crop rotation

Authors: He Wang, Chunlian Zheng, Songrui Ning, Caiyun Cao, Kejiang Li, Hongkai Dang et al.

Journal: Agricultural Water Management · DOI: 10.1016/j.agwat.2023.108383 · Citations: 77

Matched topics: irrigation

Saline water is widely used as an alternative water resource for agriculture to overcome the freshwater shortage in arid and semiarid regions. But long-term using of the saline water for irrigation would negatively affect soil properties and crop production, and the salinity of the irrigation water should be properly managed to reduce the risks. In this study, saline water with five levels of electrical conductivities (ECiw) at 1.3 (CK), 3.4, 7.1, 10.6, and 14.1 dS·m−1 were used to irrigate w…


Pathways to water sustainability? A global study assessing the benefits of integrated water resources management

Authors: Shahana Bilalova, Jens Newig, Laurent-Charles Tremblay-Lévesque, Julienne Roux, Colin Herron, Stuart W. Crane

Journal: Journal of Environmental Management · DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.118179 · Citations: 62

Matched topics: water management

Integrated water resources management (IWRM) has been central to water governance and management worldwide since the 1990s. Recognizing the significance of an integrated approach to water management as a way to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), IWRM was formally incorporated as part of the SDG global indicator framework, thus committing the UN and its Member States to achieving high IWRM implementation by 2030 and measuring progress through SDG indicator 6.5.1. This paper exam…


Water Management for Sustainable Irrigation in Rice (Oryza sativa L.) Production: A Review

Authors: Alfassassi Arouna, I. Dzomeku, A-G Shaibu, A. Nurudeen

Journal: Agronomy · DOI: 10.3390/agronomy13061522 · Citations: 53

Matched topics: water management, irrigation

In the face of the negative impacts of climate change and the accelerated growth of the global population, precision irrigation is important to conserve water resources, improve rice productivity and promote overall efficient rice cultivation, as rice is a rather water-intensive crop than other crops. For several decades, various water conserving technologies have been studied in order to significantly increase water use efficiency (WUE). The objective of this paper is to review the main tech…


Groundwater–surface water interaction in Denmark

Authors: Carlos Duque, Bertel Nilsson, Peter Engesgaard

Journal: Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Water · DOI: 10.1002/wat2.1664 · Citations: 30

Matched topics: hydrology, hydrologic model, streamflow, water management, surface water

Abstract The study of groundwater–surface water interaction has attracted growing interest among researchers in recent years due to its wide range of implications from the perspectives of water management, ecology and contamination. Many of the studies shed light on conditions on a local scale only, without exploring a regional angle. To provide a broad and historical overview of groundwater–surface water interaction, a review of research carried out in Denmark was undertaken due to the high …


Hydrological Processes, Snow Dynamics, and Remote Sensing

This theme encompasses 18 papers advancing understanding of hydrological processes through field observations, modeling, and remote sensing. Research covers snow distribution and dynamics in cold regions, forest-hydrology interactions, land use change impacts on river systems, rainfall-runoff modeling uncertainty, and satellite-based monitoring of terrestrial water resources.

Safe and just Earth system boundaries

Authors: Johan Rockström, Joyeeta Gupta, Dahe Qin, Steven J. Lade, Jesse F. Abrams, Lauren Seaby Andersen et al.

Journal: Nature · DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06083-8 · Citations: 1180

Matched topics: hydrology, hydrologic model, streamflow, land surface model, earth system model

. The stricter of the safe or just boundaries sets the integrated safe and just ESB. Our findings show that justice considerations constrain the integrated ESBs more than safety considerations for climate and atmospheric aerosol loading. Seven of eight globally quantified safe and just ESBs and at least two regional safe and just ESBs in over half of global land area are already exceeded. We propose that our assessment provides a quantitative foundation for safeguarding the global commons for…


Going beyond efficiency for solar evaporation

Authors: Ning Xu, Jinlei Li, Casey Finnerty, Yan Song, Lin Zhou, Bin Zhu et al.

Journal: Nature Water · DOI: 10.1038/s44221-023-00086-5 · Citations: 298

Matched topics: water management

Abstract not available.


Improving daily streamflow simulations for data-scarce watersheds using the coupled SWAT-LSTM approach

Authors: Shengyue Chen, Jinliang Huang, Jinliang Huang, Jr-Chuan Huang, Jr-Chuan Huang

Journal: Journal of Hydrology · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.129734 · Citations: 123

Matched topics: streamflow

Abstract not available.


Redox Oscillations Activate Thermodynamically Stable Iron Minerals for Enhanced Reactive Oxygen Species Production

Authors: Guoqiang Zhao, Mengxi Tan, Binbin Wu, Xiaoshan Zheng, Ruoxuan Xiong, Baoliang Chen et al.

Journal: Environmental Science & Technology · DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.3c02302 · Citations: 96

Matched topics: hydrology

OH production by 4.3-fold. The tidal hydrology triggered redox alternation between biotic reduction and abiotic oxidation and could accelerate the production of reactive ferrous ions and amorphous ferric oxyhydroxides, making thermodynamically stable iron minerals into redox-active metastable iron phases (RAMPs) with reduced crystallinity and promoting surface electrochemical activities. Those RAMPs displayed enhanced redox activity for ROS production. Investigations of nationwide coastal soi…


River plastic transport and deposition amplified by extreme flood

Authors: T. V. van Emmerik, R. Frings, L. Schreyers, R. Hauk, S. D. de Lange, Y. Mellink

Journal: Nature Water · DOI: 10.1038/s44221-023-00092-7 · Citations: 83

Matched topics: river, flood

Plastic pollution in the world’s rivers and ocean is increasingly threatening ecosystem health and human livelihood. In contrast to what is commonly assumed, most mismanaged plastic waste that enters the environment is not exported into the ocean. Rivers are therefore not only conduits but also reservoirs of plastic pollution. Plastic mobilization, transport and retention dynamics are influenced by hydrological processes and river catchment features (for example, land use, vegetation and rive…


Compositional reservoir simulation of underground hydrogen storage in depleted gas reservoirs

Authors: Tianjia Huang, G. Moridis, T. Blasingame, A. Abdulkader, B. Yan

Journal: International journal of hydrogen energy · DOI: 10.1016/j.ijhydene.2023.05.355 · Citations: 85

Matched topics: reservoir

Abstract not available.


Developing a Physics‐Informed Deep Learning Model to Simulate Runoff Response to Climate Change in Alpine Catchments

Authors: L. Zhong, Huimin Lei, Bing Gao

Journal: Water Resources Research · DOI: 10.1029/2022wr034118 · Citations: 59

Matched topics: hydrology, hydrologic model, runoff, streamflow, climate change

Abstract Climate change has rapidly degraded the cryosphere in alpine headwaters, altering the runoff regime of alpine watersheds and threatening water security worldwide. To precisely simulate runoff response to climate change in alpine catchments, we took the source region of the Yellow River as a case to develop a physics‐informed deep learning (DL) model that tightly hybridizes DL with the physics of dominant hydrological processes, including the neural network‐based coupling of soil free…


The Impact of Meteorological Forcing Uncertainty on Hydrological Modeling: A Global Analysis of Cryosphere Basins

Authors: Guoqiang Tang, Martyn Clark, Wouter Knoben, Hongli Liu, Shervan Gharari, Louise Arnal et al.

Journal: Water Resources Research · DOI: 10.1029/2022wr033767 · Citations: 66

Matched topics: hydrology, hydrologic model, runoff, streamflow

Abstract Meteorological forcing is a major source of uncertainty in hydrological modeling. The recent development of probabilistic large‐domain meteorological data sets enables convenient uncertainty characterization, which however is rarely explored in large‐domain research. This study analyzes how uncertainties in meteorological forcing data affect hydrological modeling in 289 representative cryosphere basins by forcing the Structure for Unifying Multiple Modeling Alternatives (SUMMA) and m…


Practice and development suggestions of hydraulic fracturing technology in the Gulong shale oil reservoirs of Songliao Basin, NE China

Authors: He Liu, Youquan Huang, Meng Cai, Siwei Meng, Jiaping Tao

Journal: Petroleum Exploration and Development · DOI: 10.1016/s1876-3804(23)60420-3 · Citations: 76

Matched topics: reservoir

This paper reviews the multiple rounds of upgrades of the hydraulic fracturing technology used in the Gulong shale oil reservoirs and gives suggestions about stimulation technology development in relation to the production performance of Gulong shale oil wells. Under the control of high-density bedding fractures, fracturing in the Gulong shale results in a complex fracture morphology, yet with highly suppressed fracture height and length. Hydraulic fracturing fails to generate artificial frac…


Rare earth elements (REEs) behavior in a large river across a geological and anthropogenic gradient

Authors: Marie-Christine Lafrenière, Jean‐François Lapierre, Dominic E. Ponton, François Guillemette, Marc Amyot

Journal: Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta · DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2023.05.019 · Citations: 62

Matched topics: hydrologic model, river, runoff

To meet the strong demand for green and digital technologies, the production of rare earth elements (REEs) has increased significantly, yet the fate of REEs (Sc, Y, La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Pm, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er, Tm, Yb, Lu) in large rivers with multiple hydrological, geochemical, and anthropogenic gradients in their catchments remains poorly documented. Here we evaluated the spatial and temporal evolution of the concentrations, patterns, and speciation of REEs in surface waters along a 550 k…


Microbial community assembly responses to polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon contamination across water and sediment habitats in the Pearl River Estuary

Authors: Wei Lin, Fuqiang Fan, Guangming Xu, Kaiyuan Gong, Xiang Cheng, Xingyu Yuan et al.

Journal: Journal of Hazardous Materials · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2023.131762 · Citations: 71

Matched topics: river

Abstract not available.


Offshore aquaculture in China

Authors: Lina Long, Huang Liu, Mingchao Cui, Chenglin Zhang, Chong Liu

Journal: Reviews in Aquaculture · DOI: 10.1111/raq.12837 · Citations: 68

Matched topics: hydrology

Abstract The mariculture industry is planning to move offshore due to the decline of China’s inshore fishery resources, the deterioration of the water environment, inefficient industrial structure and other influencing factors. This article first analyses the imbalance between supply and demand of aquatic products, the development space of offshore aquaculture and the supporting policies, thereby concluding that China has significant potential to develop offshore aquaculture. Subsequently, th…


Utilizing the strategic concession behavior in a bargaining game for optimal allocation of water in a transboundary river basin during water bankruptcy

Authors: Liang Yuan, Xia Wu, Weijun He, Dagmawi Mulugeta Degefu, Yang Kong, Yang Yang et al.

Journal: Environmental Impact Assessment Review · DOI: 10.1016/j.eiar.2023.107162 · Citations: 64

Matched topics: river

Abstract not available.


The choroid plexus acts as an immune cell reservoir and brain entry site in experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis

Authors: Ivana Lazarević, Sasha Soldati, Josephine A. Mapunda, Henriette Rudolph, Maria Rosito, Alex Cardoso de Oliveira et al.

Journal: Fluids and Barriers of the CNS · DOI: 10.1186/s12987-023-00441-4 · Citations: 59

Matched topics: reservoir

effector T-cell subsets could migrate from the basolateral to the apical side of the blood-cerebrospinal fluid barrier (BCSFB) in vitro, however, diapedesis of effector Th cells including that of Th17 cells did not require interaction of CCR6 with BCSFB derived CCL20. Our data underscore the important role of the ChP as CNS immune cell entry site in the context of autoimmune neuroinflammation.


Runoff variations affected by climate change and human activities in Yarlung Zangbo River, southeastern Tibetan Plateau

Authors: Chaoyue Li, Jiansheng Hao, Guotao Zhang, Haiyan Fang, Yan Wang, Hongjian Lu

Journal: CATENA · DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2023.107184 · Citations: 42

Matched topics: river, runoff, streamflow, climate change

Abstract not available.


A distributed hydrological model for semi-humid watersheds with a thick unsaturated zone under strong anthropogenic impacts: A case study in Haihe River Basin

Authors: Xinyu Chen, Ke Zhang, Yuning Luo, Qinuo Zhang, Jiaqi Zhou, Yazhou Fan et al.

Journal: Journal of Hydrology · DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2023.129765 · Citations: 36

Matched topics: hydrologic model, river, runoff, land surface model

Abstract not available.


From Soil to River: Revealing the Mechanisms Underlying the High Riverine Nitrate Levels in a Forest Dominated Catchment

Authors: Shen Li, Hao Jiang, Wenjing Guo, Wenshi Zhang, Quanfa Zhang

Journal: Water Research · DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2023.120155 · Citations: 49

Matched topics: river

levels worldwide.


Wind– and Sea‐Ice–Driven Interannual Variability of Antarctic Bottom Water Formation

Authors: Christina Schmidt, Adele K. Morrison, Matthew H. England

Journal: Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans · DOI: 10.1029/2023jc019774 · Citations: 47

Matched topics: surface water

Abstract Antarctic Bottom Water (AABW) is a major component of the global overturning circulation, originating around the Antarctic continental margin. In recent decades AABW has both warmed and freshened, but there is also evidence of large interannual variability. The causes of this underlying variability are not yet fully understood, in part due to a lack of ocean and air‐sea‐ice flux measurements in the region. Here, we simulate the formation and export of AABW from 1958 to 2018 using a g…


Statistics

Metric Count
Databases searched 2
Topics searched 16
Total papers fetched 821
After deduplication 609
After LLM relevance filtering 50
Rejected (not relevant) 559

Papers by journal

Journal Papers
Journal of Hydrology 4
Nature 2
Nature Water 2
Water Resources Research 2
Water Resources Management 2
Nature Communications 2
Journal of Hydrology Regional Studies 2
British Journal of Multidisciplinary and Advanced Studies 1
Total Environment Research Themes 1
Scientific Data 1
Environmental Science & Technology 1
International journal of hydrogen energy 1
Building Simulation 1
Agricultural Water Management 1
Petroleum Exploration and Development 1
One Earth 1
Sustainable Energy Technologies and Assessments 1
Expert systems with applications 1
Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 1
Journal of Hazardous Materials 1
Ecological Indicators 1
Reviews in Aquaculture 1
International Journal of Environmental Research 1
Environmental Impact Assessment Review 1
Journal of Environmental Management 1
Scientific Reports 1
Environment Development and Sustainability 1
Global Ecology and Conservation 1
Journal of Geophysical Research Biogeosciences 1
Cambridge Prisms Water 1
Fluids and Barriers of the CNS 1
Agronomy 1
CATENA 1
Humanities and Social Sciences Communications 1
Science Bulletin 1
  1
Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Water 1
Water Research 1
Expert Systems with Applications 1
PLANT PHYSIOLOGY 1
Journal of Geophysical Research Oceans 1

Filtering Criteria

Topics: hydrology, hydrologic model, river, runoff, streamflow, reservoir, water management, flood, drought, seasonal, land surface model, climate change, hydropower, surface water, irrigation, earth system model

Databases: Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex


Back to top

Powered by CrossRef, Semantic Scholar, OpenAlex, and Claude

This site uses Just the Docs, a documentation theme for Jekyll.