Johan Strömqvist
Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute
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Featured researches published by Johan Strömqvist.
Hydrological Sciences Journal-journal Des Sciences Hydrologiques | 2012
Johan Strömqvist; Berit Arheimer; Joel Dahné; Chantal Donnelly; Göran Lindström
Abstract A dynamic water quality model, HYPE, was applied to a large, data-sparse region to study whether reliable information on water quantity and water quality could be obtained for both gauged and ungauged waterbodies. The model (called S-HYPE) was set up for all of Sweden (∼450 000 km2), divided into sub-basins with an average area of 28 km2. Readily available national databases were used for physiographic data, emissions and agricultural practices, fixed values for representative years were used. Daily precipitation and temperature were used as the dynamic forcing of the model. Model evaluation was based on data from several hundred monitoring sites, of which approximately 90% had not been used in calibration on a daily scale. Results were evaluated using the Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE), correlation and relative errors: 92% of the spatial variation was explained for specific water discharge, and 88% and 59% for total nitrogen and total phosphorus concentrations, respectively. Day-to-day variations were modelled with satisfactory results for water discharge and the seasonal variation of nitrogen concentrations was also generally well captured. In 20 large, unregulated rivers the median NSE for water discharge was 0.84, and the corresponding number for 76 partly-regulated river basins was 0.52. In small basins, the NSE was typically above 0.6. These major achievements relative to previous similar experiments were ascribed to the step-wise calibration process using representative gauged basins and the use of a modelling concept, whereby coefficients are linked to physiographic variables rather than to specific sites. Editor D. Koutsoyiannis Citation Strömqvist, J., Arheimer, B., Dahné, J., Donnelly, C. and Lindström, G., 2012. Water and nutrient predictions in ungauged basins: set-up and evaluation of a model at the national scale. Hydrological Sciences Journal, 57 (2), 229–247.
Journal of Water and Health | 2018
Ekaterina Sokolova; Göran Lindström; Charlotta Pers; Johan Strömqvist; Susanna Sternberg Lewerin; Helene Wahlström; Kaisa Sörén
While agricultural activities, such as the application of manure on arable land and animal grazing on pastures, provide economic and environmental benefits, they may also pose microbial risks to water sources. The aim of this paper was to study the microbial fate and transport in an agricultural catchment and recipient water source through further development of the hydrological model HYPE. Hydrological modelling was combined with hydrodynamic modelling to simulate the fate and transport of Salmonella spp., verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli O157:H7 (VTEC) and Cryptosporidium parvum in an agricultural catchment of a drinking water source, Lake Vombsjön, in Sweden. This approach was useful to study the influence of different processes on the pathogen fate and transport, and to interpret the relative changes in the simulated concentrations. Sensitivity analysis indicated that the largest uncertainties in the model were associated with the estimation of pathogen loads, parameterisation of the pathogen processes, and simulation of partitioning between surface runoff and infiltration. The proposed modelling approach is valuable for assessing the relative effect of different risk-reducing interventions.
Environmental Modelling and Software | 2018
Lena Strömbäck; Charlotta Pers; Johan Strömqvist; Göran Lindström; Jens Gustavsson
Abstract Eutrophication of inland water is a serious problem in large parts of the world. Mitigation actions for improved water status are important but often costly to implement. Therefore, tools for estimating the plausible effect of mitigation scenarios are needed to plan which actions are most effective. In this paper we implement a web based interactive tool that allows quick exploration of several alternative mitigation scenarios. In the paper we motivate and describe the method of deriving the tool from more complex modelling systems. We implement tools for Sweden and Europe based on the hydrological simulation models S-HYPE and E-HYPE. S-HYPE is used as one important source of information for Swedens reporting of water status within the European Union Water Framework Directive. We evaluate the approach by showing that hypothetical changes in load and realistic scenarios have good agreement with full model simulation.
Hydrology Research | 2010
Göran Lindström; Charlotta Pers; Jörgen Rosberg; Johan Strömqvist; Berit Arheimer
Hydrology Research | 2012
Berit Arheimer; Joel Dahné; Chantal Donnelly; Göran Lindström; Johan Strömqvist
Archive | 2011
Chantal Donnelly; Johan Strömqvist; Berit Arheimer
Archive | 2011
Berit Arheimer; Joel Dahné; Göran Lindström; Lars Marklund; Johan Strömqvist
IAHS-AISH publication | 2010
Chantal Donnelly; Joel Dahné; Jörgen Rosberg; Johan Strömqvist; Wei Yang; Berit Arheimer
IAHS-AISH publication | 2009
Chantal Donnelly; Joel Dahné; Göran Lindström; Jörgen Rosberg; Johan Strömqvist; Charlotta Pers; Wei Yang; Berit Arheimer
Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies | 2017
Anker Lajer Højberg; Anne Lausten Hansen; Przemysław Wachniew; Anna Żurek; Seija Virtanen; Jurga Arustiene; Johan Strömqvist; Katri Rankinen; Jens Christian Refsgaard