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River flood forecasting and assessment are crucial for reducing flood risks, as they offer early alerts and allow for proactive actions to safeguard individuals from possible flood-related damage. Effective modeling in this field often multiple interconnected aspects of the hydrologic cycle, such as precipitation, infiltration, runoff, and evaporation, requiring collaboration among hydrology experts. Such collaboration enables experts to handle and manage their specialized processes more effectively, thereby enhancing the efficiency of the development of integrated flood forecasting models. Tight integration and loose integration are two common strategies for integrating different hydrologic cycle process models in river flood forecasting. However, most integration strategies rely on centralized models, necessitating experts to configure models and data on local computers. Currently, there is a deficiency in the capacity for effective collaboration in the integrated modeling of river flood forecasts. This issue arises from multiple obstacles: the complexity of understanding heterogeneous data and hydrologic cycle process models; the difficulty of integrating models with diverse runtime environments; and the challenge of synchronizing forecasting model changes among experts in real time. Therefore, we propose a web-based collaborative integrated modeling method, designed to support both tightly and loosely integrated modes, to enhance collaborative river flood forecasting and assessment. This method includes three core modules: (1) data and model description for providing a structured description of the execution logic of forecasting models and the internal structure of forecast data for expert understanding; (2) model access and integration for access and integration of data and multi-source heterogeneous models of hydrologic cycle processes; and (3) modeling scenario configuration for collaborative development of forecasting models and the execution of simulation tasks. Finally, we illustrate the application of the proposed method by utilizing the GEFS v12 (Global Ensemble Forecast System) rainfall ensemble forecasting dataset with the CREST (Coupled Routing and Excess STorage) hydrologic model. The results show enhanced efficiency in the collaborative development of river flood forecasts by hydrology experts, particularly in model accessibility, data processing, simulation, and evaluation, thereby potentially aiding decision-making.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2024.123677 | DOI Listing |
J Environ Manage
September 2025
College of chemistry and chemical Engineering, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, China. Electronic address:
Tidal estuaries serve as critical zones for biogeochemical connectivity between terrestrial and oceanic ecosystems. With climate change magnifying the impact of flood events on riverine system, dissolved organic matter (DOM) cycling, the largest reactive elemental pool in ecosystems, in tidal estuaries tend to be more complex and remain poorly understood. To address this gap, the response of DOM dynamics to flood events in a typical tidal estuary was explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2025
Department of Integrative Biology, University of California, Berkeley, CA 94720-3140.
Microscale symbioses can be critical to ecosystem functions, but the mechanisms of these interactions in nature are often cryptic. Here, we use a combination of stable isotope imaging and tracing to reveal carbon (C) and nitrogen (N) exchanges among three symbiotic primary producers that fuel a salmon-bearing river food web. Bulk isotope analysis, nanoSIMS (secondary ion mass spectrometry) isotope imaging, and density centrifugation for quantitative stable isotope probing enabled quantification of organism-specific C- and N-fixation rates from the subcellular scale to the ecosystem.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Monit Assess
September 2025
Department of Geography, Rampurhat College, University of North Bengal, Darjeeling, 734013, India.
Catastrophic climate events such as floods significantly impact infrastructure, agriculture, and the economy. The lower Gandak River basin in India is particularly flood-prone, with Bihar experiencing annual losses of life and property due to massive flooding. Identifying flood-prone zones in this region is essential.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Reprod Health
August 2025
Ipas Nepal, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Background: Nepal is highly affected by climate change, experiencing glacier melting, untimely rainfall, floods, landslides, forest fires, and droughts, which collectively impact over 10 million people. There is a larger impact of climate change on human health, but its impact on women's and girls' sexual and reproductive health and rights is yet to be explored. Thus, this study aims to understand the linkages between climate change and the unique impact on gender and sexual, and reproductive health and rights (SRHR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Environ Manage
September 2025
Key Lab of Basin Water Resource and Eco-Environmental Science in Hubei Province, Basin Water Environmental Research Department, Changjiang River Scientific Research Institute, No.23 Huangpu Road, Wuhan, 430010, PR China; Innovation Team for Basin Water Environmental Protection and Governance of Chan
Small cascade dams drive spatial divergence in the composition of dissolved organic matter (DOM) in local sediments. Taking Xixi River in the southeast of China, a representative small cascade-dammed watershed, as an example, this study explored the spatial variations of DOM components and its interactions with microbial communities under the influence of cascade dams. Results revealed that DOM composition differed significantly, i.
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