Showing 1 - 20 results of 28 for search '(( sharp increase in runoff ) OR ( share ((decrease OR decreased) OR increased) in runoff ))*', query time: 0.16s Refine Results
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    Study of characteristics of the supraglacial runoff of the Austre Grønfjordbreen, Spitsbergen by R. A. Chernov

    Published 2023-04-01
    “…As the snow line rises and the area of open ice increases, the share of runoff in the weathering crust increases. …”
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    Study on the effect of underlying surface changes on runoff generation in the urbanized watershed by Yunqiu Jiang, Lichun Wang, Tianning Xie, Runxi Li, Kejia Wen, Chengshuai Liu, Caihong Hu

    Published 2025-04-01
    “…(b) The percentage of excess surface runoff (R s) in the central city increased significantly from 22 to 67%, and showed a trend of expansion from the central city to the suburbs. …”
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    Evaluation of Urban Flood Susceptibility Under the Influence of Urbanization Based on Shared Socioeconomic Pathways by Xiaoping Fu, Fangyan Xue, Yunan Liu, Furong Chen, Hao Yang

    Published 2025-03-01
    “…This study evaluates urban flood susceptibility under different Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) in the context of urbanization. …”
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    Water resource vulnerabilities from climate-induced tipping point behaviour in runoff volumes and seasonality in the region of the ‘Karakoram Anomaly’: A snow-glacier melt perspect... by Jamal Hassan Ougahi, John S. Rowan

    Published 2025-06-01
    “…Our glacio-hydrological model projects substantial glacier retreat from 4270 km2 in 2010 reducing to 3540 km2 or 2730 km2 by 2100 according to SSP2 and SSP5, respectively. Increased annual runoff peaks around 2050 (SSP2) and by 2070 (SSP5) before decline in total runoff by 2100. …”
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    Motivating conservation action in the Upper Midwest: Source attention, information seeking and sharing, and farmers' land management decisions by Dara M. Wald, Miguel Diaz‐Manrique, Laura Witzling, Jaqueline Comito

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…Abstract Adoption of on‐farm conservation strategies, such as edge‐of‐field practices, has the potential to reduce nutrient runoff, promote greater biodiversity, and improve water quality. …”
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    Analysis of Sediment Variation in Important Tributaries of the Yellow River in the Sandy and Coarse Sediment Area Based on Detrital Zircons and Hydrological Observations by Ting BAI, Niannian FAN, Yuanjian WANG, Ruihua NIE, Xingnian LIU

    Published 2025-01-01
    “…In the Kuye River, abrupt change points in runoff occurred in 1979, 1997, and 2011. The first two points showed significant decreases, while the last point indicated a significant increase. …”
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    Water Discharge Change in the Rivers of the South of the Boreal Forest Zone of Eastern European Russia at the End of the Late Holocene and in the Anthropocene: The Vyatka River by Artyom V. Gusarov, Achim A. Beylich

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…A gradual increase in the share of the so-called normal annual WD and a decrease in the abnormal (including extreme) annual WD were noted from 1878–1929 to 1978–2018 in the predominantly northern half of the river basin. …”
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    Evaluating the Potential of Roof Water Harvesting System for Drinking Water Supplies During Emergencies Under the Impacts of Climate Change: ‘A Case Study of Swat District, Pakista... by Shamaima Wafa Qammar, Fayaz Ahmad Khan, Rashid Rehan

    Published 2025-04-01
    “…The regional climate data are gathered from the Shared Socio-economic Pathways (SSPs) for the period from 2015 to 2045. …”
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    Water and Sediment Effects of Soil and Water Conservation in Qingshui River Basin, Ningxia by YANG Jun, XU Jing-hua, ZENG Chen-jun, LIU Chang-hui

    Published 2025-06-01
    “…Annual runoff and sediment transport in Guyuan showed a significant downward trend. …”
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    Hydrological and chemical water regime in the catchments of Bystra and Sucha Woda, in the Tatra National Park by Monika Sajdak, Joanna Siwek, Anna Bojarczuk, Mirosław Żelazny

    Published 2018-09-01
    “…Low values of mineralization, electrical conductivity and concentration of main ions were accompanied by increased flows during the summer and autumn. In all the waters subjected to testing, there was also a marked decrease in the value of these parameters during the spring thaw. …”
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    Geospatial Land cover change analysis using the CA-Markov Chain Model in Chikwawa District, Malawi by Japhet Khendlo, Rajeshwar Goodary, Roodheer Beeharry

    Published 2025-04-01
    “…This ongoing deforestation will exacerbate the absorption of runoff and increase flood severity in the district. …”
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    Vostok Bay: interseasonal changes in hydrological, hydrochemical and microbiological properties by N. K. Khristoforova, A. Yu. Lazaryuk, E. V. Zhuravel, T. V. Boychenko, A. A. Emelyanov

    Published 2023-12-01
    “…The summer monsoon in spring and summer with southeastern winds increases the river runoff and simultaneously the inflow of fresh water from the open sea, so causes a sharp difference in the water properties between parts of the Vostok Bay. …”
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    Sediment Particle Size Distribution behind the Check Dams of the Lashkaran Watershed, Salmas, West Azerbaijan by Afsaneh Jafari, Habib Nazarnejad, Saeed Najafi, farrokh asadzadeh

    Published 2024-10-01
    “…The amount of clay is constant with increasing distance, with increased silt and decreased sand percentages. …”
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    Landscape fragmentation reduces but shape complexity enhances soil loss: Evidence from the plain grain-producing area along the Yangtze River in China by Shunqian Gao, Wenyi Yang, Xingyu Tan, Shumi Liu, Yangbiao Li, Xingzi Yu, Zhen Wang, Zhanhang Zhou, Chen Zeng

    Published 2025-08-01
    “…The results showed that: (1) A decrease in total soil loss from 2005 to 2015, associated with rapid farmland decline due to intensified anthropogenic activities, followed by a sharp increase from 2015 to 2019, largely driven by extensive farmland reclamation projects. (2) Contrary to conventional understanding, patch density (PD) was found to be negatively correlated with soil loss, attributed to human interventions such as agricultural facility construction and ecological ridges that disrupt runoff pathways and increase surface roughness. …”
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    Evaluation of coupled SWAT-MODFLOW-NWT model for conjunctive use of surface water and groundwater resources in the Mahabad plain of Iran by Omid Raja, Masoud Parsinejad, Massoud Tajrishy

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…The ultimate objective of adopting these scenarios was to increase the residual share of the water supply in order to compensate for the deprived share of Urmia Lake. …”
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    Climate change impacts on flood risks in the Abou Ali River Basin, Lebanon: A hydrological modeling approach by Fouadi AlZaatiti, Jalal Halwani, Mohamed R. Soliman

    Published 2025-03-01
    “…Flood modeling with the Rainfall-Runoff-Inundation (RRI) model reveals a dramatic increase in inundation extent, from 8.78 km² to 26.05 km², and a rise in maximum depth from 6.5 m to 14.7 m, with urban and agricultural areas at significant risk. …”
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    Long-term development of a perennial firn aquifer on the Lomonosovfonna ice cap, Svalbard by T. van den Akker, T. van den Akker, W. van Pelt, R. Petterson, V. A. Pohjola

    Published 2025-04-01
    “…We find that the aquifer was present in 1957 and that it steadily grew over the modeled period with a relative increase of about 15 % in water table depth. On an annual basis, the aquifer exhibits sharp water table increases during the melt season, followed by slow seepage through the cold season.…”
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    Measuring community resilience of flash floods using a multilevel interpretive structure model: Quantification and time-varying responses by Ming Zhong, Feng Ling, Weichen Zhong, Qian Zhang

    Published 2025-04-01
    “…With the expansion of inundation, the resilience of all three types of communities shows a consistent trend of “sharp decrease − rapid increase − slow decrease”. …”
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