2: New experimental concepts to search for functional landscape entities and to explore their controls on catchment functioning - Poster

Thursday, 25 September 2014: 10:50 AM-12:00 PM
Primary Convener:  Theresa Blume, GFZ German Research Centre, Potsdam, Germany
Convener:  Laurent Pfister, CRP Gabriel Lippmann, Belvaux, Luxembourg
Looking at catchments in a new way: The role of connectivity, scale, and location to understand the export of diverse biogeochemical elements
Tejshree Tiwari1, Hjalmar Laudon2, Anneli Agren2, William Lidman1 and Fredrik Lidman2, (1)SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå, Forest Ecology and Management, Umeå, Sweden, (2)SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Umeå, Umeå, Sweden
 
Potential of soil water content mapping using electromagnetic induction in a low conductive coniferous forest ecosystem catchment
Daniel Altdorff1, Jan Van Der Kruk1, Christian von Hebel1, Nils Borchard1, Heye R Bogena1, Harry Vereecken2 and Johan Alexander Huisman3, (1)Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany, (2)Agrosphere Institute (IBG-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Deutschland, Germany, (3)Forschungszentrum Jülich, Agrosphere (IBG 3), Jülich, Germany
 
Combination of electrical resistivity tomography and vertical electrical soundings for characterization of a representative hillslope as a functional unit in a catchment
Tatiana Feskova1 and Peter Dietrich1,2, (1)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Department Monitoring and Exploration Technologies, Leipzig, Germany, (2)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Taucha, Germany
 
Controls on groundwater response timing of a subalpine catchment
Michael Rinderer, Department of Geography - University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, Ilja H.J. van Meerveld, Free University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1081, Netherlands, Manfred Stähli, Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL, Birmensdorf, Switzerland and Jan Seibert, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
 
Landslides triggered by distant earthquakes in Central Asia
Bakhtier Nurtaev, Institute of geology and geophysics,Academy of Sciences of Uzbekistan, Director, Tashkent, Uzbekistan
 
What controls groundwater dynamics and hillslope-stream connectivity in an Alpine headwater catchment?
Daniele Penna Sr.1, Zuecco Giulia Jr.2, Luisa Pianezzola Jr.2, Ilja H.J. van Meerveld3 and Maco Borga Sr.2, (1)ETH Zurich, Department of Environmental Systems Science, Zurich, Switzerland, (2)University of Padova, Land, Environment, Agriculture and Forestry, Padova, Italy, (3)VU Amsterdam, Faculty of Earth and Life Sciences, Amsterdam, Netherlands
 
Climate and landscape controls on the behaviour of catchment storage and streamflow
Christopher Spence, Environment Canada, Saskatoon, SK, Canada and Rosa Brannen, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada
 
Can we relate flood and low flow behavior to spatial distribution of thick quaternary deposits? Case study of the 14 km2 alpine Poschiavino catchment, Switzerland
Marius Floriancic1, Maarten Smoorenburg1, Michael Margreth2 and Felix Naef1, (1)ETH Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland, (2)Soilcom GmbH, Zurich, Switzerland
 
A multi-method analysis of bedload transport with seismometers and with hydrophones
Andreas Krein1, Julien Barrière2, Adrien Oth2 and Renaud Hostache1, (1)CRP Gabriel Lippmann, Belvaux, Luxembourg, (2)European Center for Geodynamics and Seismology, Walferdange, Luxembourg
 
Spatiotemporal evolution of the constructed Hühnerwasser catchment (“Chicken Creek”)
Christoph Hinz1, Wolfgang Schaaf2, Werner Gerwin2, Anna Schneider2, Markus Zaplata1, Annika Baddoreck2, Thomas Fischer2 and Reinhard Huettl3, (1)Brandenburg Technical University Cottbus Senftenberg, Hydrology and Water Resources Management, Cottbus, Germany, (2)BTU Cottbus, Cottbus, Germany, (3)GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences, Potsdam, Germany, Potsdam, Germany
 
Seasonal Soil Moisture Patterns Control Transit Time Distributions in a Forested Headwater Catchment
Michael Paul Stockinger1, Heye R Bogena1, Andreas Lücke1, Bernd Diekkrüger2, Markus Weiler3 and Harry Vereecken4, (1)Agrosphere Institute (IBG-3), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Deutschland, Germany, (2)University of Bonn, Geography, Bonn, Germany, (3)University Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, (4)Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH, Julich, Germany
 
QUANTITATIVE ASPECTS OF SOIL FORMATION IN MOUNTAINEOUS AREAS
Andrea Román Sanchez, Tom Vanwalleghem and Juan V Giraldez, Universidad de Córdoba, Departamento Agronomía, Córdoba, Spain
 
How does landscape organization determine complex flood runoff behavior? Lessons from geomorphology based mapping and modeling of dominant runoff processes in meso-scale alpine catchmens
Maarten Smoorenburg, Nina Volze, Felix Naef and James W Kirchner, ETH Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
 
Inferring dominant controls on transpiration across a hillslope transect from ecohydrological measurements and thermodynamic limits
Maik Renner1, Sibylle K Hassler2, Theresa Blume2, Markus Weiler3, Anke Hildebrandt4, Marcus Guderle4, Stanislaus Schymanski5 and Axel Kleidon1, (1)Max-Planck-Institute for Biogeochemistry, Biospheric Theory and Modelling Group, Jena, Germany, (2)GFZ German Research Centre, Potsdam, Germany, (3)University Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany, (4)Friedrich Schiller University of Jena, Ecological Modelling, Jena, Germany, (5)ETH Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
 
Roles of hillslope and channel on spatial distribution of peak lag times during heavy storms at 4.5km2 mountain watershed
Yuko Asano, The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan and Taro Uchida, Public Works Research Institut, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan
 
Time-lapse imaging of subsurface flow patterns by ground penetrating radar
Niklas Allroggen and Jens Tronicke, University of Potsdam, Institut für Erd- und Umweltwissenschaften, Potsdam, Germany
 
A measure for transformation of the input signal in the soil-groundwater-stream continuum and implications for modelling
Gunnar Lischeid1,2, Tobias L. Hohenbrink1,2 and Christian Lehr1,2, (1)ZALF, Muencheberg, Germany, (2)University of Potsdam, Institute of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Potsdam, Germany
 
Who is in Control? Competing Influences of Geology, Land use and Topography on Soil Water Storage and Soil Temperature Dynamics
Theresa Blume1, Sibylle K Hassler1 and Markus Weiler2, (1)GFZ German Research Centre, Potsdam, Germany, (2)University Freiburg, Freiburg, Germany
 
Spatiotemporal variability and landscape controls of specific discharge in a Boreal landscape
Reinert Huseby Karlsen1, Kevin H Bishop1,2, Thomas Grabs1 and Jan Seibert3, (1)Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden, (2)Swedish University of Agricultural Science, Uppsala, Sweden, (3)University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland
 
Isotope fractionation in different types of soil water
Martine Stoll1,2, Christophe Hissler2 and Arnaud Legout3, (1)SLU Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Uppsala, Uppsala, Sweden, (2)CRP Gabriel Lippmann, Belvaux, Luxembourg, (3)INRA Nancy-Lorraine, Champenoux, France
 
Identification of catchment functional units by time series of thermal remote sensing images
Karsten Schulz1, Benjamin Mueller1,2 and Matthias Bernhardt2, (1)BOKU University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Institute of Water Managment, Hydrology and Hydraulic Engineering, Vienna, Austria, (2)LMU, Geography, 80333 Munich, Germany
 
Revealing principles of hydrological response – The Schaefertal approach
Ute Wollschlaeger1, Thomas Grau2, Edoardo Martini2, Markus Neubauer3, Andreas Schmidt2, Martin Schrön3, Ingmar Schroeter3, Peter Dietrich4, Jan H Fleckenstein1, Angela Lausch3, Andreas Musolff2, Hendrik Paasche2, Frido Reinstorf5, Hans-Joerg Vogel6, Ulrike Werban3 and Steffen Zacharias7, (1)UFZ, Leipzig, Germany, (2)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research - UFZ, Leipzig, Germany, (3)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany, (4)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Leipzig, Taucha, Germany, (5)University of Applied Sciences Magdeburg-Stendal, Magdeburg, Germany, (6)Helmholtz Centre for Environmental Research UFZ Halle, Halle, Germany, (7)Helmholtz Centre Env. Res., Leipzig, Germany
 
How to define hydrological functioning and how to connect it with structural catchment properties?
Simon P Seibert1, Erwin Zehe1, Uwe Ehret1 and Conrad Jackisch2, (1)Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Institute of Water and River Basin Management, Karlsruhe, Germany, (2)Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Karlsruhe, Germany
 
 
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