🥁 Monday, December 15 at 10:00 (UTC+1).🥁

--> PhD defense of Taha ATTOU

Quantifying #water fluxes across a semi-arid soil-plant-atmosphere continuum under contrasting #irrigation practices: an #ecohydrological #modeling and water #stable #isotope approach

https://watson-cost.eu/2025/10/26/defence-of-the-doctoral-dissertation-by-taha-attou/

Defence of the Doctoral Dissertation by Taha Attou – Watson

REMINDER!!! Tomorrow (5 April) is WATSON Wednesday!
At 12:30 CET, Angelika Kübert talks about #ecohydrological processes in #grassland and #forest #ecosystems. Register here https://watson-cost.eu/wednesdays-with-watson/
WATSON Wednesdays – Watson

Do not miss next WATSON Wednesdays' seminar! Angelika Kübert will talk about #ecohydrological processes in #grassland and #forest #ecosystems. Visit our website for more info and to enrol https://watson-cost.eu/2023/03/16/watson-wednesdays-angelika-kubert/ #stableisotopes #plant #water
WATSON Wednesdays: Angelika Kübert – Watson

Thanks to Harsh Beria for his very interesting seminar on Partitioning rainfall and snowmelt between trees, streams, and groundwater in the Swiss Alps!
Next WATSON Wednesday will be the 5th April. Angelika Kuebert will talk about #ecohydrological #processes in #grasslands and #forests. More info and registration here https://watson-cost.eu/wednesdays-with-watson/! #stableisotopes #water #criticalzone
WATSON Wednesdays – Watson

"Evapotranspiration" was the prompt for this #TextToImage illustration generated by #midjourney.

The prompt is a quote from the abstract for the #AGU22 online session "Advances in Observation and Modeling of Seasonal Snow and #Ecohydrological Processes in Forests and Cold Regions III"

📆 🔗 : https://bit.ly/CZNAGU22121207

#CriticalZone #CriticalZoneResearch #SnowScience #biogeosciences

Advances in Observation and Modeling of Seasonal Snow and Ecohydrological Processes in Forests and Cold Regions III Poster

In cold regions and forests, water availability depends on the complex dynamics between seasonal snow and ecohydrological processes, which are also sensitive to a warming climate and land cover disturbances. Many forest processes (e.g., interception, evapotranspiration) are tightly linked to the canopy structure and vary across small spatial scales. Snow and ecohydrological processes further vary across landscape scales due to interactions with atmosphere, topography, and vegetation. These interacting processes entail major observational and modeling challenges for both current and future conditions. Recent remote sensing technology provide detailed understanding of forest snow and canopy structure, vegetation disturbance and regrowth, as well as snow distributions across a range of spatial scales. Modeling capabilities continue to improve through advances in physical parameterizations, data assimilation, and data-driven techniques. This session focuses on novel observations and advances in modeling techniques for understanding snow and ecohydrological processes in snow-covered regions and forests.

AGU - Fall Meeting 2022