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drought.NL

Advancing the understanding and monitoring of drought in a warming world

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Tag: Netherlands

Reducing drought by changing the surface water system

On September 21, 2021 By Robert Lubben In Research

Experiences from recent droughts show that elevated sandy areas in the southern and eastern Netherlands are vulnerable to drought (see e.g. Buitink et al., 2020). Transporting water to these areas is difficult due to their elevation and distance to river systems. In addition, the use of surface water for functions …

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How forests can increase hydrological drought

On January 18, 2021 By Ryan Teuling In Research

Forests are known to have a negative effect on water yield (the total annual streamflow). However, little is known about the effect of forest on hydrological droughts. Considering the relatively high evapotranspiration of forest, hydrological droughts might be expected to increase when forest establishes. The effect of forest on hydrological …

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Critical soil moisture thresholds during the 2018 drought identified

On January 8, 2021 By Ryan Teuling In Research, Uncategorized

The impact of drought on vegetation does not increases proportionally with decreasing soil moisture content. The so-called critical soil moisture content below which evapotranspiration reduction and vegetation impact rapidly increase is a key parameter, but knowledge on the critical soil moisture is limited due to a lack of soil moisture …

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Current drought links

Potential precipitation deficit (KNMI)
Climate dashboard (KNMI)
Drought portal Netherlands
Dutch drought monitor (RWS)
European Drought Observatory (JRC)
Global drought observatory (Copernicus)
U.S. Drought monitor

About

drought.NL is a platform for research on drought processes, quantification, and its impacts on water resources, agriculture, and natural ecosystems. It serves as the informal homepage of the climate hydrology team at Wageningen University.

The climate hydrology team is lead by Ryan Teuling, associate professor in the Hydrology and Quantitative Water Management Group at Wageningen University. Our research focusses on the interaction between hydrological and atmospheric processes, from diurnal to climate change timescales.

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