Project Details
Generation, transport and retention of water and suspended sediments in large dryland catchments: Monitoring and integrated modelling of fluxes and connectivity phenomena
Subject Area
Hydrogeology, Hydrology, Limnology, Urban Water Management, Water Chemistry, Integrated Water Resources Management
Term
from 2010 to 2019
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 160797836
Understanding connectivity in hydrological systems is important given the degree to which such connectivity has been impaired by human activities worldwide, e.g. by water abstraction and reservoir construction. Specifically for dryland regions, which host about one-third of the global population and are exposed to the hazard that available water resources fail to meet water demand, the assessment of water and sediment fluxes are a prerequisite for sustainable water and sediment management. Drylands often experience strong erosion in headwater catchments, resulting in reservoir sedimentation and a loss of retention volume which can lead to a significant reduction of water availability within few decades. This project will quantify and model runoff and suspended sediment transfer paths in dryland regions. Connectivity processes between water and sediment delivering, accepting and transporting compartments, including the analysis of transfer routes and storage capabilities, will be analysed for instrumented meso-scale catchments in Spain and Brazil. Extended multi-scale field monitoring, the quantification of leakiness and landscape fragmentation, the application of innovative sediment tracing techniques, and the identification of major sources, stores and fluxes of sediments through remotely sensed data will result in an enhanced process understanding of connectivity. An existing modelling framework for water and sediment transport, the WASA-SED model, will be extended to account for these phenomena at the intersections of hillslopes, rivers and reservoirs. Large-scale pilot parameterisations for parts of the Ésera Basin in Spain and the Upper Jaguaribe in Brazil will be conducted to evaluate scenarios on land and reservoir management. The expected results will improve the knowledge and modelling capability of connectivity processes of water and sediment fluxes in drylands at spatial scales relevant for water and land management.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
Brazil, Spain
Major Instrumentation
Laser Scanning System
Instrumentation Group
0550 Sichtweitemeßgeräte, Wolkenmesser