Hydrological Sciences Journal. Special Issue: Modelling Temporally-variable Catchments

International audience Table of contents : - On the need to test hydrological models under changing conditions - Negligent killing of scientific concepts: the stationarity case - Hydrology under change: an evaluation protocol to investigate how hydrological models deal with changing catchments - A c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Thirel, Guillaume
Other Authors: Hydrosystèmes et Bioprocédés (UR HBAN), Institut national de recherche en sciences et technologies pour l'environnement et l'agriculture (IRSTEA)
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.inrae.fr/hal-02602064
Description
Summary:International audience Table of contents : - On the need to test hydrological models under changing conditions - Negligent killing of scientific concepts: the stationarity case - Hydrology under change: an evaluation protocol to investigate how hydrological models deal with changing catchments - A comparative assessment of AWBM and SimHyd for forested watersheds - Hydrological impact of forest-fire from paired-catchment and rainfall–runoff modelling perspectives - Detecting immediate wildfire impact on runoff in a poorly-gauged mountainous permafrost basin - Feed-forward vs recurrent neural network models for non-stationarity modelling using data assimilation and adaptivity - Testing the robustness of the physically-based ECOMAG model with respect to changing conditions - Simulating temporal variability in catchment response using a monthly rainfall–runoff model - The influence of parametric uncertainty on the relationships between HBV model parameters and climatic characteristics - Stability of model performance and parameter values on two catchments facing changes in climatic conditions - Current runoff variations in the Macta catchment (Algeria): is climate the sole factor? - Impact of bushfire and climate variability on streamflow from forested catchments in southeast Australia - Testing the applicability of a kinematic wave-based distributed hydrological model in two climatically contrasting catchments - Performance of the COSERO precipitation–runoff model under non-stationary conditions in basins with different climates - Graphical tools based on Turc-Budyko plots to detect changes in catchment behaviour - Parameter transferability under changing climate: case study with a land surface model in the Durance watershed, France - Dependence of model-based extreme flood estimation on the calibration period: case study of the Kamp River (Austria) - Hydrological modelling of temporally-varying catchments: facets of change and the value of information