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AGU: Water Resources Research

 

Keywords

  • catchment hydrology
  • pattern comparison
  • scaling
  • spatial structure
  • spatial variability
  • topographic controls

Index Terms

  • Hydrology: Computational hydrology
  • Hydrology: Catchment
  • Hydrology: Groundwater hydrology
  • Hydrology: Hydrologic scaling
Abstract
Cited By (7)
 

Abstract

Importance of spatial structures in advancing hydrological sciences

K. Schulz

UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle GmbH, Leipzig, Germany

Interdisciplinary Centre for Pattern Dynamics and Applied Remote Sensing, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

R. Seppelt

UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle GmbH, Leipzig, Germany

E. Zehe

Interdisciplinary Centre for Pattern Dynamics and Applied Remote Sensing, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

Institute of Geoecology, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany

H. J. Vogel

UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle GmbH, Leipzig, Germany

S. Attinger

UFZ Centre for Environmental Research Leipzig-Halle GmbH, Leipzig, Germany

Spatial patterns of land surface and subsurface characteristics often exert significant control over hydrological processes at many scales. Recognition of the dominant controls at the watershed scale, which is a prerequisite to successful prediction of system responses, will require significant progress in many different research areas. The development and improvement of techniques for mapping structures and spatiotemporal patterns using geophysical and remote sensing techniques would greatly benefit watershed science but still requires a significant synthesis effort. Effective descriptions of hydrological systems will also significantly benefit from new scaling and averaging techniques, from new mathematical description for spatial pattern/structures and their dynamics, and also from an understanding and quantification of structure and pattern-building processes in different compartments (soils, rocks, and land surface) and at different scales. The advances that are needed to tackle these complex challenges could be greatly facilitated through the development of an interdisciplinary research framework that explores instrumentation, theory, and simulation components and that is implemented in a coordinated manner.

Received 31 May 2005; accepted 13 October 2005; published 1 February 2006.

Citation: Schulz, K., R. Seppelt, E. Zehe, H. J. Vogel, and S. Attinger (2006), Importance of spatial structures in advancing hydrological sciences, Water Resour. Res., 42, W03S03, doi:10.1029/2005WR004301.

Cited By

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