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Development of an integrated model for the Campaspe catchment: A tool to help improve understanding of the interaction between society, policy, farming decision, ecology, hydrology and climate

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Authors

Iwanaga, Takuya
Zare, Fateme
Croke, Barry
Fu, Baihua
Merritt, Wendy
Partington, Daniel
Ticehurst, Jenifer
Jakeman, Anthony

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Publisher

Copernicus Publications

Abstract

Management of water resources requires understanding of the hydrology and hydrogeology, as well as the policy and human drivers and their impacts. This understanding requires relevant inputs from a wide range of disciplines, which will vary depending on the specific case study. One approach to gain understanding of the impact of climate and society on water resources is through the use of an integrated modelling process that engages stakeholders and experts in specifics of problem framing, co-design of the underpinning conceptual model, and discussion of the ensuing results. In this study, we have developed such an integrated modelling process for the Campaspe basin in northern Victoria, Australia. The numerical model built has a number of components:

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Citation

Iwanaga, T., Zare, F., Croke, B., Fu, B., Merritt, W., Partington, D., Ticehurst, J., and Jakeman, A.: Development of an integrated model for the Campaspe catchment: a tool to help improve understanding of the interaction between society, policy, farming decision, ecology, hydrology and climate, Proc. IAHS, 379, 1–12, https://doi.org/10.5194/piahs-379-1-2018, 2018.

Source

Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences

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Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

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