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Water Resources in a Variable and Changing Climate



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Autore: Aymar Y. Bossa Visualizza persona
Titolo: Water Resources in a Variable and Changing Climate Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2015
Soggetto non controllato: meteorological variables
water resources management
uncertainty
hydrological models
climate models
Persona (resp. second.): Bernd Diekkrüger
Hong-Ming Liu
Eihab Fathelrahman
Charles B. Niwagaba
Md Sumon Shahriar
Zongli Li
James Pritchett
Jonathan E. Kenny
Mohammad Kamruzzaman
Robert Brooks
Mike D. Burch
Leszek Sobkowiak
Janel Hanrahan
Sergey Kravtsov
Mohammed Saif Al-Kalbani
Wen-Cheng Huang
Wen-Cheng Liu
Euloge K. Agbossou
Alistair Grinham
Patrick Willems
M. Mercedes Taboada-Castro
Timothy O'Higgins
Alec Zuo
John Boland
Mushtaque Ahmed
M. Teresa Taboada-Castro
Asma Abahussain
Mary Akurut
Rupak Aryal
Robert I. Daly
Jyun-Long Lee
Amalia Davies
Jun Xia
Jan Jacob Keizer
Martin F. Price
Simon Beecham
Morgan Bida
Leon van der Linden
Edwyna Harris
Joao Pedro Nunes
Ann Wheeler
Henning Bjornlund
Ricardo Arias
Todd Pagano
Stephen Davies
Paul Roebber
Lingling Zhao
M. Luz Rodríguez-Blanco
Sommario/riassunto: Climate change will bring about significant changes to the capacity of, and the demand on, water resources. The resulting changes include increasing climate variability that is expected to affect hydrologic conditions. The effects of climate variability on various meteorological variables have been extensively observed in many regions around the world. Atmospheric circulation, topography, land use and other regional features modify global changes to produce unique patterns of change at the regional scale. As the future changes to these water resources cannot be measured in the present, hydrological models are critical in the planning required to adapt our water resource management strategies to future climate conditions. Such models include catchment runoff models, reservoir management models, flood prediction models, groundwater recharge and flow models, and crop water balance models. In water-scarce regions such as Australia, urban water systems are particularly vulnerable to rapid population growth and climate change. In the presence of climate change induced uncertainty, urban water systems need to be more resilient and multi-sourced. Decreasing volumetric rainfall trends have an effect on reservoir yield and operation practices. Severe intensity rainfall events can cause failure of drainage system capacity and subsequent urban flood inundation problems. Policy makers, end users and leading researchers need to work together to develop a consistent approach to interpreting the effects of climate variability and change on water resources. This Special Edition includes papers by international experts who have investigated climate change impacts on a variety of systems including irrigation and water markets, land use changes and vegetation growth, lake water levels and quality and sea level rises. These investigations have been conducted in many regions of the world including the USA, China, East Africa, Australia, Taiwan and the Sultanate of Oman.
Titolo autorizzato: Water Resources in a Variable and Changing Climate  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910688384403321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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