TY - JOUR A1 - Müller, Eva Nora A1 - van Schaik, Loes A1 - Blume, Theresa A1 - Bronstert, Axel A1 - Carus, Jana A1 - Fleckenstein, Jan H. A1 - Fohrer, Nicola A1 - Geissler, Katja A1 - Gerke, Horst H. A1 - Gräff, Thomas A1 - Hesse, Cornelia A1 - Hildebrandt, Anke A1 - Hölker, Franz A1 - Hunke, Philip A1 - Körner, Katrin A1 - Lewandowski, Jörg A1 - Lohmann, Dirk A1 - Meinikmann, Karin A1 - Schibalski, Anett A1 - Schmalz, Britta A1 - Schröder-Esselbach, Boris A1 - Tietjen, Britta T1 - Scales, key aspects, feedbacks and challenges of ecohydrological research in Germany JF - Hydrologie und Wasserbewirtschaftung N2 - Ecohydrology analyses the interactions of biotic and abiotic aspects of our ecosystems and landscapes. It is a highly diverse discipline in terms of its thematic and methodical research foci. This article gives an overview of current German ecohydrological research approaches within plant-animal-soil-systems, meso-scale catchments and their river networks, lake systems, coastal areas and tidal rivers. It discusses their relevant spatial and temporal process scales and different types of interactions and feedback dynamics between hydrological and biotic processes and patterns. The following topics are considered key challenges: innovative analysis of the interdisciplinary scale continuum, development of dynamically coupled model systems, integrated monitoring of coupled processes at the interface and transition from basic to applied ecohydrological science to develop sustainable water and land resource management strategies under regional and global change. KW - Coastal regions KW - drylands KW - ecohydrological modelling KW - feedback KW - hyporheic zone KW - meso-scale ecosystems KW - plant-animal-soil-system KW - river networks Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5675/HyWa_2014,4_2 SN - 1439-1783 VL - 58 IS - 4 SP - 221 EP - 240 PB - Bundesanst. für Gewässerkunde CY - Koblenz ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Munz, Matthias A1 - Krause, Stefan A1 - Tecklenburg, Christina A1 - Binley, Andrew T1 - Reducing monitoring gaps at the aquifer-river interface by modelling groundwater-surface water exchange flow patterns JF - Hydrological processes N2 - This study investigates spatial patterns and temporal dynamics of aquifer-river exchange flow at a reach of the River Leith, UK. Observations of sub-channel vertical hydraulic gradients at the field site indicate the dominance of groundwater up-welling into the river and the absence of groundwater recharge from surface water. However, observed hydraulic heads do not provide information on potential surface water infiltration into the top 0-15 cm of the streambed as these depths are not covered by the existing experimental infrastructure. In order to evaluate whether surface water infiltration is likely to occur outside the 'window of detection', i.e. the shallow streambed, a numerical groundwater model is used to simulate hydrological exchanges between the aquifer and the river. Transient simulations of the successfully validated model (Nash and Sutcliff efficiency of 0.91) suggest that surface water infiltration is marginal and that the possibility of significant volumes of surface water infiltrating into non-monitored shallow streambed sediments can be excluded for the simulation period. Furthermore, the simulation results show that with increasing head differences between river and aquifer towards the end of the simulation period, the impact of streambed topography and hydraulic conductivity on spatial patterns of exchange flow rates decreases. A set of peak flow scenarios with altered groundwater-surface water head gradients is simulated in order to quantify the potential for surface water infiltration during characteristic winter flow conditions following the observation period. The results indicate that, particularly at the beginning of peak flow conditions, head gradients are likely to cause substantial increase in surface water infiltration into the streambed. The study highlights the potential for the improvement of process understanding of hyporheic exchange flow patterns at the stream reach scale by simulating aquifer-river exchange fluxes with a standard numerical groundwater model and a simple but robust model structure and parameterization. Copyright KW - hyporheic zone KW - aquifer-river interface KW - groundwater-surface water exchange KW - MODFLOW Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.8080 SN - 0885-6087 VL - 25 IS - 23 SP - 3547 EP - 3562 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Malden ER -