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Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Published

Standard

Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios. / Broderick, Ciaran; Murphy, Conor.
Technical report: review and simulate climate and catchment responses at Burrishoole (RESCALE). Marine Institute, 2014. p. 244-302 (Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNChapter

Harvard

Broderick, C & Murphy, C 2014, Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios. in Technical report: review and simulate climate and catchment responses at Burrishoole (RESCALE). Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series, Marine Institute, pp. 244-302. <http://hdl.handle.net/10793/944>

APA

Broderick, C., & Murphy, C. (2014). Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios. In Technical report: review and simulate climate and catchment responses at Burrishoole (RESCALE) (pp. 244-302). (Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series). Marine Institute. http://hdl.handle.net/10793/944

Vancouver

Broderick C, Murphy C. Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios. In Technical report: review and simulate climate and catchment responses at Burrishoole (RESCALE). Marine Institute. 2014. p. 244-302. (Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series).

Author

Broderick, Ciaran ; Murphy, Conor. / Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios. Technical report: review and simulate climate and catchment responses at Burrishoole (RESCALE). Marine Institute, 2014. pp. 244-302 (Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series).

Bibtex

@inbook{1d37ddcfa5ee45deb01cb120f7e18869,
title = "Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios",
abstract = "The climate of the Burrishoole catchment is projected to change significantly over the present century. Previous research of the catchment identified a scientific gap in knowledge in terms of understanding the implications of present and projected future changes in stream flow, water temperature, pH levels and DO concentrations on fish productivity in the catchment. To address this, a multidisciplinary team of scientists undertook an analysis of both present and likely future climate impacts on the catchment with a view to furthering the understanding of the inter-linkages between climate, climate change, and the freshwater ecosystem. The research findings outlined in the report provide climate change information at the catchment scale to assist catchment stakeholders in integrating climate change considerations into their decision-making processes. The report presents an in-depth assessment of the climate and environmental datasets from the catchment to establish if changes have occurred over the period of record. In order to assess the likely impacts of future changes in climate on the catchment, regional climate projections were developed and subsequently employed to simulate likely responses in stream flow and temperature, DOC and DO for the present century. The projected changes in both the climate and water-quality were then used to provide a basis for assessing impacts on fish growth and survival rates of salmonid and eel species in the catchment. The report provides a useful template for future studies, not just in the Burrishoole catchment but for other ecologically important catchments. The findings from the report are relevant to policy makers at the national scale; catchment managers at the regional scale; and, specifically, to stakeholders in the Burrishoole catchment, in developing adaptive responses to climate change.",
keywords = "Climate change, catchment systems, Burrishoole, aquatic environment",
author = "Ciaran Broderick and Conor Murphy",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
series = "Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-{\textquoteright}13) Series",
publisher = "Marine Institute",
pages = "244--302",
booktitle = "Technical report",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Catchment hydrology under future climate scenarios

AU - Broderick, Ciaran

AU - Murphy, Conor

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The climate of the Burrishoole catchment is projected to change significantly over the present century. Previous research of the catchment identified a scientific gap in knowledge in terms of understanding the implications of present and projected future changes in stream flow, water temperature, pH levels and DO concentrations on fish productivity in the catchment. To address this, a multidisciplinary team of scientists undertook an analysis of both present and likely future climate impacts on the catchment with a view to furthering the understanding of the inter-linkages between climate, climate change, and the freshwater ecosystem. The research findings outlined in the report provide climate change information at the catchment scale to assist catchment stakeholders in integrating climate change considerations into their decision-making processes. The report presents an in-depth assessment of the climate and environmental datasets from the catchment to establish if changes have occurred over the period of record. In order to assess the likely impacts of future changes in climate on the catchment, regional climate projections were developed and subsequently employed to simulate likely responses in stream flow and temperature, DOC and DO for the present century. The projected changes in both the climate and water-quality were then used to provide a basis for assessing impacts on fish growth and survival rates of salmonid and eel species in the catchment. The report provides a useful template for future studies, not just in the Burrishoole catchment but for other ecologically important catchments. The findings from the report are relevant to policy makers at the national scale; catchment managers at the regional scale; and, specifically, to stakeholders in the Burrishoole catchment, in developing adaptive responses to climate change.

AB - The climate of the Burrishoole catchment is projected to change significantly over the present century. Previous research of the catchment identified a scientific gap in knowledge in terms of understanding the implications of present and projected future changes in stream flow, water temperature, pH levels and DO concentrations on fish productivity in the catchment. To address this, a multidisciplinary team of scientists undertook an analysis of both present and likely future climate impacts on the catchment with a view to furthering the understanding of the inter-linkages between climate, climate change, and the freshwater ecosystem. The research findings outlined in the report provide climate change information at the catchment scale to assist catchment stakeholders in integrating climate change considerations into their decision-making processes. The report presents an in-depth assessment of the climate and environmental datasets from the catchment to establish if changes have occurred over the period of record. In order to assess the likely impacts of future changes in climate on the catchment, regional climate projections were developed and subsequently employed to simulate likely responses in stream flow and temperature, DOC and DO for the present century. The projected changes in both the climate and water-quality were then used to provide a basis for assessing impacts on fish growth and survival rates of salmonid and eel species in the catchment. The report provides a useful template for future studies, not just in the Burrishoole catchment but for other ecologically important catchments. The findings from the report are relevant to policy makers at the national scale; catchment managers at the regional scale; and, specifically, to stakeholders in the Burrishoole catchment, in developing adaptive responses to climate change.

KW - Climate change

KW - catchment systems

KW - Burrishoole

KW - aquatic environment

M3 - Chapter

T3 - Marine Research Sub-Programme (NDP 2007-’13) Series

SP - 244

EP - 302

BT - Technical report

PB - Marine Institute

ER -