DocumentCode
61322
Title
Overview of Ecohydrological Models and Systems at the Watershed Scale
Author
Lajiao Chen ; Lizhe Wang ; Yan Ma ; Peng Liu
Author_Institution
Inst. of Remote Sensing & Digital Earth, Beijing, China
Volume
9
Issue
3
fYear
2015
fDate
Sept. 2015
Firstpage
1091
Lastpage
1099
Abstract
In the context of global change exacerbating the water crisis, it is difficult to solve the new problems of water resource management based on traditional hydrology without considering other aspects of water circulation, such as biotic dynamics. Vegetation, which once was thought to play only a relatively minor role and was ignored or treated as a static component in models, has now been recognized as one of the most important factors in water circulation. Ecohydrology has been promoted as a concept that links ecological and hydrological processes and considers interactions between water resources and ecosystems. Ecohydrological models are not only important tools for studying the mechanisms of ecological patterns and processes but also essential tools to assess the effects of environmental change on hydrological and ecological processes, providing solutions to issues of water management. This paper: 1) analyzes the characteristics of the interactions between terrestrial vegetation and hydrological processes; 2) summarizes the categories of existing watershed ecohydrological models for analysis and discusses the advantages and disadvantages of different kinds of ecohydrological models; 3) reviews the typical achievements of the application of ecohydrological models; and 4) illustrates the key issues of ecohydrological models at the watershed scale.
Keywords
ecology; hydrology; water resources; ecohydrology; ecological patterns; ecological process; ecosystems; global change; hydrological processes; terrestrial vegetation; water circulation; water crisis; water resource management; watershed ecohydrological models; watershed scale; Biological system modeling; Computational modeling; Mathematical model; Soil; Vegetation; Vegetation mapping; Water resources; Ecohydrological interaction; ecohydrological models; global change; hydrological processes; vegetation dynamic;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Systems Journal, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1932-8184
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JSYST.2013.2296979
Filename
6782450
Link To Document