SMIRES COST Action

1.3K posts

SMIRES COST Action banner
SMIRES COST Action

SMIRES COST Action

@smirescost

Science and Management of Intermittent Rivers & Ephemeral Streams, COST Action CA15113, H2020, networking, conferences, workshops, early career scientists

Europe and beyond Katılım Nisan 2016
55 Takip Edilen582 Takipçiler
SMIRES COST Action retweetledi
Rachel Stubbington
Rachel Stubbington@rstubbington·
A rarity - a study of macroinvertebrate community diversity in ephemeral and perennial streams in a glacierized catchment, in Alaska. Dedicated to the memory of the much-missed Jill Crossman. doi.org/10.1007/s10750… @Fred_Windsor
English
1
1
10
863
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Bourke et al. present a framework representing the hydrology of persistent pools in IRES. It can be used to evaluate pool vulnerability to changes in climate and groundwater abstraction. Congrats @shanagland et al. on this important work. doi.org/10.5194/hess-2…
English
1
9
33
3.7K
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Arce et al. quantify CO2 and N2O emssions from IRES in agricultural areas. CO2 is released during both dry and wet phases. Microbial denitrification after water returns results in transitory N2O emissions and can locally reduce nitrate pollution doi.org/10.1016/j.jenv…
English
0
3
9
971
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Jaeger et al. use 544 observations of wet/dry instream state to train a model to predict streamflow permanence in mountain headwater streams, with drainage area, geology, topography and land cover acting as top predictors doi.org/10.1002/hyp.14…
English
0
0
7
674
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Schmidt et al.: a rare study of fish alpha and beta diversity in an Afrotropical river system in which intermittence is exacerbated by human activities. doi.org/10.1002/ece3.9…
English
0
0
1
286
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Congrats @agdelv et al. Great to see non-perennial streams represented in your study, and interesting to see that non-perennial streams were among those with the highest, most variable GHG concentrations
Amanda DelVecchia@agdelv

Low gradient, higher temperature @NEON_sci streams tended to have higher GHG concentrations. Relationships btwn CO2, CH4, and O2 suggested anaerobic metabolism in-stream or along contributing GW flowpaths. @DrBioGC @FluvialBenthos @aliceinH2Oland aslopubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/ln…

English
0
0
2
379
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Exciting new paper by @tdatry @AmelAqua et al. out in BioScience: Causes, Responses, and Implications of Anthropogenic versus Natural Flow Intermittence in River Networks. How do natural and artificial IRES differ? doi.org/10.1093/biosci…
Thibault Datry @tdatry.bsky.social@tdatry

Naturally #DryingRivers support unique #Biodiversity & numerous #EcosystemServices. Rivers that dry because of #HumanActivities may not: ignoring this distinction could undermine #management of #RiverNetworks & exacerbate risks to ecosystems & people. urlz.fr/k4Zy

English
0
0
2
0
SMIRES COST Action
SMIRES COST Action@smirescost·
Fei et al. propose a deep-learning model to map alpine IRES at the catchment scale, using Sentinel-1 time series and digital elevation models. This could be a powerful tool to monitor change in IRES—in challenging environments. doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.…
English
0
0
3
0