Ecohydrological Modelling

Group profile

The Ecohydrological Modelling group of the Department of Ecohydrology and Biogeochemistry primarily develops and applies numerical tools to simulate connected terrestrial-aquatic ecosystems. Such models help address questions on: 

  1. how ecohydrological processes in landscapes affect water bodies (lakes, ponds, rivers, floodplains, wetlands, estuaries or marshlands) in terms of water and material fluxes and storage, and 
  2. how ecohydrological settings in different climates and geomorphic provinces as well as human-induced changes (i.e. land use change, climate change, management) shape ecohydrological and biogeochemical processes in freshwater ecosystems. 

We hereby aim to better understand and predict the functioning and impacts of global change on our land- and waterscapes through advanced process-based models. These state-of-the-art models are developed and tested with measured data providing robust estimates of how much water flows, with what quality and how much water is stored in the landscape and water bodies.

Publications

2026

2025

2024

December 2024
Ricardo Sánchez-Murillo; Dimitris A. Herrera; Kegan K. Farrick; Germain Esquivel-Hernández; Rolando Sánchez-Gutiérrez; Javier Barberena-Moncada; Jorge Guatemala-Herrera; Yelba Flores-Meza; Roberto Cerón-Pineda; Laura Gil-Urrutia; Jorge Cardona-Hernández; Tania Peña-Paz; Junior O. Hernández-Ortiz; Wendy Harrison-Smith; Geoffrey Marshall; Aurel Persoiu; Juan Pérez-Quezadas; Miguel Mejía-González; Luis González-Hita; Marcia Barrera de Calderón; Alejandro García-Moya; Debora Hernández; Kristen Welsh; Rene M. Price; Diego A. Riveros-Iregui; Ny Riavo G. Voarintsoa; Joshua C. Bregy; Minerva Sánchez-Llull; Carlos Alonso-Hernández; Saúl Santos-García; Ana M. Durán-Quesada; Christian Birkel; Jan Boll; Kim M. Cobb; Adrián F. Obando-Amador; Ingrid M. Vargas-Azofeifa; Doerthe Tetzlaff; Chris Soulsby; Sylvia G. Dee