Predictions of Hydroclimatic Extremes: Floods, Droughts and Heatwaves
A special issue of Geosciences (ISSN 2076-3263). This special issue belongs to the section "Natural Hazards".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (15 August 2022) | Viewed by 573
Special Issue Editors
Interests: water resources management; hydrological modelling; drought analysis and impacts; hydroinformatics; hydrological extremes and climate change
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: statistical analysis of hydrological extremes; climate change/variability impact assessment on hydrology and water resources; monitoring and modeling of water availability and drought/water scarcity
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: hydrological and land-surface modelling; predictions and modelling of hydrological extremes (floods and droughts); hydrological predictions in data-scare and ungauged basins (PUB); climate change impact assessment for hydro-climatic applications; seasonal forecasts toward hydro-meteorological applications; distributed hydrologic modelling (development and applications); scaling of hydrological process and model parameterizations; drought and heatwaves; data-driven and modelling studies focusing on hydro-meteorological applications from regional to global scales
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Extreme hydroclimatic events pose a major threat to human societies, affecting urban and rural areas with direct and indirect impacts on populations, agricultural production, infrastructure, etc. Recent studies and reports by international organisations stress the fact that climate change is anticipated to increase the frequency and intensify the severity of hydroclimatic extremes in many parts of the globe in the coming years. Both developed and developing counties are vulnerable to hydroclimatic extremes, including floods, droughts, and heatwaves, among others.
Therefore, timely and accurate prediction of hydroclimatic extremes is essential for devising early warning systems and activating awareness plans to mitigate the anticipated damages based on informed decision support systems. Recent advances in remote sensing, hydroinformatics, data acquisition, and modelling approaches may enhance the effectiveness of such predictions for any type of hydroclimatic extremes (floods, droughts, and heatwaves), as well as their applicability to various systems.
This Special Issue welcomes original papers dealing with the above issues, along with state-of-the-art approaches and solutions for the efficient prediction of the occurrence and/or the effects of hydroclimatic extremes.
Dr. Dimitris Tigkas
Dr. Hossein Tabari
Dr. Rohini Kumar
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Floods
- Droughts
- Heatwaves
- Climate change
- Environmental risk assessment
- Climatic variability
- Water resources management
- Natural hazards
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