4 research outputs found
The Hydrological Open Air Laboratory (HOAL) in Petzenkirchen: a hypothesis-driven observatory
Hydrological observatories bear a lot of resemblance to the more traditional
research catchment concept, but tend to differ in providing more long-term
facilities that transcend the lifetime of individual projects, are more
strongly geared towards performing interdisciplinary research, and are often
designed as networks to assist in performing collaborative science. This
paper illustrates how the experimental and monitoring set-up of an
observatory, the 66 ha Hydrological Open Air Laboratory (HOAL) in
Petzenkirchen, Lower Austria, has been established in a way that allows
meaningful hypothesis testing. The overarching science questions guided site
selection, identification of dissertation topics and the base monitoring. The
specific hypotheses guided the dedicated monitoring and sampling, individual
experiments, and repeated experiments with controlled boundary conditions.
The purpose of the HOAL is to advance the understanding of water-related flow
and transport processes involving sediments, nutrients and microbes in small
catchments. The HOAL catchment is ideally suited for this purpose, because it
features a range of different runoff generation processes (surface runoff,
springs, tile drains, wetlands), the nutrient inputs are known, and it is
convenient from a logistic point of view as all instruments can be connected
to the power grid and a high-speed glassfibre local area network (LAN). The
multitude of runoff generation mechanisms in the catchment provides a genuine
laboratory where hypotheses of flow and transport can be tested, either by
controlled experiments or by contrasting sub-regions of different
characteristics. This diversity also ensures that the HOAL is representative
of a range of catchments around the world, and the specific process findings
from the HOAL are applicable to a variety of agricultural catchment settings.
The HOAL is operated jointly by the Vienna University of Technology and the
Federal Agency for Water Management and takes advantage of the Vienna
Doctoral Programme on Water Resource Systems funded by the Austrian Science
Funds. The paper presents the science strategy of the set-up of the
observatory, discusses the implementation of the HOAL, gives examples of the
hypothesis testing and summarises the lessons learned. The paper concludes
with an outlook on future developments