Geo-environmental processes and ecological dynamics using remote sensing techniques

The project aims to integrate ecology, hydrology, fluvial geomorphology and remote sensing to understand and predict the impacts of short term climate anomalies on fluvial ecosystems (temporal streams), through: i) impact assessment of historical (recent years) drought events on riparian vegetation with conventional satellite imagery; ii) tracing the effects of water reduction (i.e. hydric stress) on fluvial ecosystems with the last-generation high resolution images and data (i.e. nanosatellites, LIDAR, drones); and iii) results calibration using data obtained with fieldwork.

Featured publications of this Line of Research:

Lorenzo-Lacruz, J., Amengual, A., Garcia, C., Morán-Tejeda, E., Homar, V., Maimó-Far, A., Hermoso, A., Ramis, C., and Romero, R. (2019): Hydro-meteorological reconstruction and geomorphological impact assessment of the October, 2018 catastrophic flash flood at Sant Llorenç, Mallorca (Spain), Nat. Hazards Earth Syst. Sci. 19, 2597–2617, 2019.https://doi.org/10.5194/nhess-19-2597-2019

Lorenzo-Lacruz, J., Garcia, C., Morán-Tejeda, E. (2017): Groundwater level responses to precipitation varibility in Mediterranean insular aquifers, Journal of Hydrology 552, 516-531.