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Catchment scale flood management using SCIMAP-Flood: Spatial targeting of flood hazard reduction measures in the East Rapti catchment, Nepal

Date: April 09, 2019 Callum Pearson, Sim M. Reaney, Nick J. Rosser, Andrew R.G. Large, Matthew T. Perks, and Borbála Hortobágyi Practical approaches for managing flood hazards are moving from mitigation solely at the point of… Catchment scale flood management using SCIMAP-Flood: Spatial targeting of flood hazard reduction measures in the East Rapti catchment, Nepal

The identification of sediment and connectivity patterns to map critical source areas across scales for effective mitigation of diffuse sediment pollution

Date: April 09, 2019, EGU Meeting in Vienna. Sim Reaney, Eleanor Mackay, Phil Haygarth, and Claire Benskin Diffuse pollution from agriculture constitutes a key pressure on the water quality of freshwaters and is frequently the cause… The identification of sediment and connectivity patterns to map critical source areas across scales for effective mitigation of diffuse sediment pollution

Managing multiple non-point pressures on water quality and ecological habitat: Spatially targeting effective mitigation actions at the landscape scale

Sim Reaney, American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2014 Abstract Catchment systems deliver many benefits to society and ecology but also produce a range of undesirable externalities including flooding, diffuse pollution from agriculture, forestry and urban… Managing multiple non-point pressures on water quality and ecological habitat: Spatially targeting effective mitigation actions at the landscape scale

EGU2011: Can a static metric for hydrologic connectivity improve predictions of instream water quantity and quality?

Dave Milledge (1,2), Stuart Lane (1,2), Sim Reaney (1,2), and Louise Heathwaite (3) The concept of connectivity is increasingly being applied in hydrology as researchers attempt to move beyond the traditional partial or variable source… EGU2011: Can a static metric for hydrologic connectivity improve predictions of instream water quantity and quality?