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Persistent Identifier
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perma:LIST.GGU0KL |
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Publication Date
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2025-12-09 |
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Title
| Using multi-tracer inference to move beyond single-catchment ecohydrology [* Cross-Reference *] |
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Other Identifier
| https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2016.06.014 |
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Author
| Abbott, Benjamin W. (Écosystèmes, Biodiversité, Évolution) - ORCID: 0000-0001-5861-3481
Baranov, Viktor (Leibniz-Institute of Freshwater Ecology and Inland Fisheries) - ORCID: 0000-0003-1893-3215
Mendoza-Lera, Clara (Reduce, Reuse, Recover Wastewater Resources (REVERSAAL))
Nikolakopoulou, Myrto (Naturalea)
Harjung, Astrid (Universitat de Barcelona)
Kolbe, Tamara (Géosciences Rennes)
Balasubramanian, Mukundh N. (BioSistemika)
Vaessen, Timothy N. (CSIC - Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Blanes (CEAB))
Ciocca, Francesco (Silixa Ltd)
Campeau, Audrey (Uppsala Universitet)
Wallin, Marcus B. (Uppsala Universitet)
Romeijn, Paul (University of Birmingham)
Antonelli, Marta (Luxembourg Institute of Science and Technology)
Gonçalves, José (National Institute of Biology Ljubljana) - ORCID: 0000-0003-2191-527X
Datry, Thibault (Reduce, Reuse, Recover Wastewater Resources (REVERSAAL))
Laverman, Anniet M. (Écosystèmes, Biodiversité, Évolution)
de Dreuzy, Jean Raynald (Géosciences Rennes)
Hannah, David M. (University of Birmingham)
Krause, Stefan (University of Birmingham)
Oldham, Carolyn (The University of Western Australia)
Pinay, Gilles (Écosystèmes, Biodiversité, Évolution) |
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Point of Contact
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Use email button above to contact.
LIST RDS (LIST) |
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Description
| Protecting or restoring aquatic ecosystems in the face of growing anthropogenic pressures requires an understanding of hydrological and biogeochemical functioning across multiple spatial and temporal scales. Recent technological and methodological advances have vastly increased the number and diversity of hydrological, biogeochemical, and ecological tracers available, providing potentially powerful tools to improve understanding of fundamental problems in ecohydrology, notably: 1. Identifying spatially explicit flowpaths, 2. Quantifying water residence time, and 3. Quantifying and localizing biogeochemical transformation. In this review, we synthesize the history of hydrological and biogeochemical theory, summarize modern tracer methods, and discuss how improved understanding of flowpath, residence time, and biogeochemical transformation can help ecohydrology move beyond description of site-specific heterogeneity. We focus on using multiple tracers with contrasting characteristics (crossing proxies) to infer ecosystem functioning across multiple scales. Specifically, we present how crossed proxies could test recent ecohydrological theory, combining the concepts of hotspots and hot moments with the Damköhler number in what we call the HotDam framework. (2016-01-01)
***This entry has been automatically imported via Infodoc(ASO) CSV by LIST harvest scripts. Please refer to https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2016.06.014 for the original and latest version of the dataset and data downloads*** (2025-11-18) |
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Subject
| Other |
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Keyword
| aquatic ecology
crossed proxies
Damköhler
ecohydrology
environmental hydrology
exposure time
flowpath
groundwater
GW-SW interactions
hot moments
hot spots
HotDam
Hydrological tracer
Péclet
reactive transport
residence time
surface water
Tracer
water |
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Deposit Date
| 2016-01-01 |
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Data Type
| Review |
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Data Source
| Earth-Science Reviews |