Overall, the GCM — BCSD — VIC approach, for now, remains the preferred approach for projecting basin - scale
future hydrologic changes, provided that it explicitly accounts for the biases and includes plausible snow and runoff parameterizations.
Not exact matches
«Our finding that vegetation plays a key role
future in terrestrial
hydrologic response and water stress is of utmost importance to properly predict
future dryness and water resources,» says Gentine, whose research focuses on the relationship between hydrology and atmospheric science, land / atmosphere interaction, and its impact on climate
change.
Understanding how human water use would respond to global warming and its combined effects on the
hydrologic cycle is important for better designing mitigation and adaption strategies to the global
change in the
future.
They have provided a much better understanding of
hydrologic responses to climate
change, which in turn will provide tremendous guidance for
future planning.»
Estimating and predicting
future hydrologic and climatic
changes can not be done if we do not know the recent past well enough.