Authors
Madgalena Rogger, M Agnoletti, Abdallah Alaoui, JC Bathurst, G Bodner, M Borga, Vincent Chaplot, F Gallart, G Glatzel, J Hall, J Holden, L Holko, R Horn, Andrew Kiss, S Kohnová, G Leitinger, B Lennartz, J Parajka, R Perdigão, S Peth, L Plavcová, John N Quinton, M Robinson, JL Salinas, A Santoro, J Szolgay, S Tron, JJH Van Den Akker, A Viglione, G Blöschl
Publication date
2017/7
Source
Water resources research
Volume
53
Issue
7
Pages
5209-5219
Description
Research gaps in understanding flood changes at the catchment scale caused by changes in forest management, agricultural practices, artificial drainage, and terracing are identified. Potential strategies in addressing these gaps are proposed, such as complex systems approaches to link processes across time scales, long‐term experiments on physical‐chemical‐biological process interactions, and a focus on connectivity and patterns across spatial scales. It is suggested that these strategies will stimulate new research that coherently addresses the issues across hydrology, soil and agricultural sciences, forest engineering, forest ecology, and geomorphology.
Total citations
20172018201920202021202220232024324526569777335
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