Title
Data Descriptor: High-resolution hydrometeorological data from a network of headwater catchments in the tropical Andes
Date Issued
03 July 2018
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Ochoa-Tocachi B.F.
Antiporta J.
Acosta L.
Bardales J.D.
Célleri R.
Crespo P.
Fuentes P.
Gil-RĂ­os J.
Guallpa M.
Pardo P.
VillacĂ­s M.
VillazĂ³n M.
Viñas P.
De Bièvre B.
Publisher(s)
Nature Publishing Groups
Abstract
This article presents a hydrometeorological dataset from a network of paired instrumented catchments, obtained by participatory monitoring through a partnership of academic and non-governmental institutions. The network consists of 28 headwater catchments (<20 km^2) covering three major biomes in 9 locations of the tropical Andes. The data consist of precipitation event records at 0.254 mm resolution or finer, water level and streamflow time series at 5 min intervals, data aggregations at hourly and daily scale, a set of hydrological indices derived from the daily time series, and catchment physiographic descriptors. The catchment network is designed to characterise the impacts of land-use and watershed interventions on the catchment hydrological response, with each catchment representing a typical land use and land cover practice within its location. As such, it aims to support evidence-based decision making on land management, in particular evaluating the effectiveness of catchment interventions, for which hydrometeorological data scarcity is a major bottleneck. The data will also be useful for broader research on Andean ecosystems, and their hydrology and meteorology.
Volume
5
Number
180080
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
OceanografĂ­a, HidrologĂ­a, Recursos hĂ­dricos
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85049498795
PubMed ID
Source
Scientific Data
ISSN of the container
20524463
Sponsor(s)
Funding text 1 The authors gratefully acknowledge the people and authorities of Andean communities who have provided important and constant consent and support to our fieldwork. We thank all partners of the Regional Initiative for Hydrological Monitoring of Andean Ecosystems (iMHEA), particularly to FONAG, Universidad de Cuenca, NCI, APECO, The Mountain Institute, CONDESAN, and LHUMSS who provided the data presented here. In addition, we would like to acknowledge the important contributions of Alexander More (NCI), Katya PĂ©rez and MarĂ­a Arguello and Miguel Saravia (CONDESAN), Mariela Leo (APECO), Jorge Recharte (The Mountain Institute), and Gena Gammie (Forest Trends) as key stakeholders of iMHEA. This work was supported by grant NE/K010239-1 (Mountain-EVO) funded by the UK Department for International Development (DFID), the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), as well as NERC grant NE/I004017/1. B.O.T. was funded by an Imperial College President's PhD Scholarship and the 'Science and Solutions for a Changing Planet' DTP (NERC grant NE/L002515/1). All iMHEA partners funded fieldwork. Funding text 2 The authors gratefully acknowledge the people and authorities of Andean communities who have provided important and constant consent and support to our fieldwork. We thank all partners of the Regional Initiative for Hydrological Monitoring of Andean Ecosystems (iMHEA), particularly to FONAG, Universidad de Cuenca, NCI, APECO, The Mountain Institute, CONDESAN, and LHUMSS who provided the data presented here. In addition, we would like to acknowledge the important contributions of Alexander More (NCI), Katya PĂ©rez and MarĂ­a Arguello and Miguel Saravia (CONDESAN), Mariela Leo (APECO), Jorge Recharte (The Mountain Institute), and Gena Gammie (Forest Trends) as key stakeholders of iMHEA. This work was supported by grant NE/K010239-1 (Mountain-EVO) funded by the UK Department for International Development (DFID), the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), and the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), as well as NERC grant NE/I004017/1. B.O.T. was funded by an Imperial College President’s PhD Scholarship and the ‘Science and Solutions for a Changing Planet’ DTP (NERC grant NE/L002515/1). All iMHEA partners funded fieldwork. National Eye Research Centre - NERC
Sources of information: Directorio de ProducciĂ³n CientĂ­fica Scopus