25 research outputs found

    Agroforesterie et services écosystémiques en zone tropicale

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    Respectueux de l’environnement et garantissant une sĂ©curitĂ© alimentaire soutenue par la diversification des productions et des revenus qu’ils procurent, les systĂšmes agroforestiers apparaissent comme un modĂšle prometteur d’agriculture durable dans les pays du Sud les plus vulnĂ©rables aux changements globaux. Cependant, ces systĂšmes agroforestiers ne peuvent ĂȘtre optimisĂ©s qu’à condition de mieux comprendre et de mieux maĂźtriser les facteurs de leurs productions. L’ouvrage prĂ©sente un ensemble de connaissances rĂ©centes sur les mĂ©canismes biophysiques et socio-Ă©conomiques qui sous-tendent le fonctionnement et la dynamique des systĂšmes agroforestiers. Il concerne, d’une part les systĂšmes agroforestiers Ă  base de cultures pĂ©rennes, telles que cacaoyers et cafĂ©iers, de rĂ©gions tropicales humides en AmĂ©rique du Sud, en Afrique de l’Est et du Centre, d’autre part les parcs arborĂ©s et arbustifs Ă  base de cultures vivriĂšres, principalement de cĂ©rĂ©ales, de la rĂ©gion semi-aride subsaharienne d’Afrique de l’Ouest. Il synthĂ©tise les derniĂšres avancĂ©es acquises grĂące Ă  plusieurs projets associant le Cirad, l’IRD et leurs partenaires du Sud qui ont Ă©tĂ© conduits entre 2012 et 2016 dans ces rĂ©gions. L’ensemble de ces projets s’articulent autour des dynamiques des systĂšmes agroforestiers et des compromis entre les services de production et les autres services socio-Ă©cosystĂ©miques que ces systĂšmes fournissent

    Zwei Fïżœlle von Atropinvergiftung bei Kindern

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    Monitoring evapotranspiration from remote sensing data for groundwater resources evaluation.

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    International audienceEvapotranspiration (ET) is a fundamental variable of the hydrological cycle which plays a major role on surface water balance and surface energy balance. At local scale ET can be estimated from detailed ground observations (eddy covariance towers), but these measurements are only representative of very limited homogeneous area. When regional information is required, e.g. for monitoring ground water resources, the flux tower measurements cannot be used directly and estimation of ET often relies on estimation from meteorological data through potential evapotranspiration formulas. At regional scale remote sensing provides spatially distributed information for mapping and monitoring ET, but this information is still rarely used for ground water assessment. Indeed, remote sensing estimation of ET suffers several drawbacks. In particular, remote sensing information by itself cannot provide a continuous monitoring of ET because of the presence of clouds and the revisit period of the sensor. Another difficulty originates in the lack of exhaustive evaluation of remote sensed ET since accurate ground measurements are scarce and representative of a limited number of homogeneous areas. This has also for consequence that a large number of methodologies to derive ET were developed with no real possibility of a consistent evaluation. We have developed the EVASPA (EVapotranspiration Assessment from SPAce) tool to monitor ET on a daily basis, together with an evaluation of the associated uncertainties, from remote sensing data in the thermal and the solar domains (Gallego Elvira et al. 2013). This tool combines the estimation of ET from various models and various sources of data, including MODIS sensors, LANDSAT-borne sensors and meteorological information. EVASPA was applied to estimate evapotranspiration over several areas in the products such as MOD16 or analysis of atmospheric-hydrological modeling such as the operational Safran-Isba-Modcou application). The results highlight the potential use of the retrieved ET for calibrating groundwater models (e.g. for estimating aquifer parameters
) or evaluating model inputs (e.g. determination of effective rainfall, identification of irrigated areas
). We also evaluated the impact of the uncertainties in the estimation of ET in the monitoring of ground water. We showed that the main sources of ET uncertainty were related to the uncertainties in incident radiations and surface temperature together with the diversity of ET models. When forced in ground water models, the uncertainties in ET had an impact almost equivalent to the impact of uncertainties in rain inputs. South of France to help in monitoring the water budget of different hydrosystems: superficial aquifer in the Rhîne river delta (Camargue), karstic aquifer of the Fontaine de Vaucluse spring system and alluvial aquifer in Limagne with increasing water withdrawing for irrigation. The method was first evaluated against flux tower measurements of evapotranspiration (RMSE between 0.5 and 1 mm/day depending on the ecosystems). When integrated over watershed, ET retrievals were also compared to indirect estimates of evapotranspiration from either water balance and stream flow monitoring or other modelling approaches for time period of more than a decade (these include remote sensing operationa

    Monitoring evapotranspiration from remote sensing data for groundwater resources evaluation.

    No full text
    International audienceEvapotranspiration (ET) is a fundamental variable of the hydrological cycle which plays a major role on surface water balance and surface energy balance. At local scale ET can be estimated from detailed ground observations (eddy covariance towers), but these measurements are only representative of very limited homogeneous area. When regional information is required, e.g. for monitoring ground water resources, the flux tower measurements cannot be used directly and estimation of ET often relies on estimation from meteorological data through potential evapotranspiration formulas. At regional scale remote sensing provides spatially distributed information for mapping and monitoring ET, but this information is still rarely used for ground water assessment. Indeed, remote sensing estimation of ET suffers several drawbacks. In particular, remote sensing information by itself cannot provide a continuous monitoring of ET because of the presence of clouds and the revisit period of the sensor. Another difficulty originates in the lack of exhaustive evaluation of remote sensed ET since accurate ground measurements are scarce and representative of a limited number of homogeneous areas. This has also for consequence that a large number of methodologies to derive ET were developed with no real possibility of a consistent evaluation. We have developed the EVASPA (EVapotranspiration Assessment from SPAce) tool to monitor ET on a daily basis, together with an evaluation of the associated uncertainties, from remote sensing data in the thermal and the solar domains (Gallego Elvira et al. 2013). This tool combines the estimation of ET from various models and various sources of data, including MODIS sensors, LANDSAT-borne sensors and meteorological information. EVASPA was applied to estimate evapotranspiration over several areas in the products such as MOD16 or analysis of atmospheric-hydrological modeling such as the operational Safran-Isba-Modcou application). The results highlight the potential use of the retrieved ET for calibrating groundwater models (e.g. for estimating aquifer parameters
) or evaluating model inputs (e.g. determination of effective rainfall, identification of irrigated areas
). We also evaluated the impact of the uncertainties in the estimation of ET in the monitoring of ground water. We showed that the main sources of ET uncertainty were related to the uncertainties in incident radiations and surface temperature together with the diversity of ET models. When forced in ground water models, the uncertainties in ET had an impact almost equivalent to the impact of uncertainties in rain inputs. South of France to help in monitoring the water budget of different hydrosystems: superficial aquifer in the Rhîne river delta (Camargue), karstic aquifer of the Fontaine de Vaucluse spring system and alluvial aquifer in Limagne with increasing water withdrawing for irrigation. The method was first evaluated against flux tower measurements of evapotranspiration (RMSE between 0.5 and 1 mm/day depending on the ecosystems). When integrated over watershed, ET retrievals were also compared to indirect estimates of evapotranspiration from either water balance and stream flow monitoring or other modelling approaches for time period of more than a decade (these include remote sensing operationa
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