Marie Silvestre
Centre national de la recherche scientifique
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Featured researches published by Marie Silvestre.
Archive | 2011
Gilles Billen; Marie Silvestre; Bruna Grizzetti; Adrian Leip; Fayçal Bouraoui; H Behrendt; Josette Garnier; Christoph Humborg; Erik Smedberg; Penny J Johnes; Øyvind Kaste; Cj Curtis; Ahti Lepistö; Pirkko Kortelainen; Raja Ganeshram; A. H. W. Beusen; Maren Voss
Approaches A comprehensive evaluation of net anthropogenic inputs of reactive nitrogen (NANI) through atmospheric deposition, crop N fi xation, • fertiliser use and import of food and feed has been carried out for all European watersheds. A database on N, P and Si fl uxes delivered at the basin outlets has been assembled. A number of modelling approaches based on either statistical regression analysis or mechanistic description of the processes involved • in nitrogen transfer and transformations have been developed for relating N inputs to watersheds to outputs into coastal marine ecosystems.
Frontiers in Marine Science | 2018
Mélanie Raimonet; Vincent Thieu; Marie Silvestre; Ludovic Oudin; Christophe Rabouille; Robert Vautard; Josette Garnier
Studies quantifying the impact of climate change have so far mostly examined atmospheric variables, and few are evaluating the cascade of aquatic impacts that will occur along the land–ocean continuum until the ultimate impacts on coastal eutrophication potential. In this study, a new hydro-biogeochemical modeling chain has been developed, based on the coupling of the generic pyNuts-Riverstrahler biogeochemical model and the GR4J-CEMANEIGE hydrological model, and applied to the Seine River basin (France). Averaged responses of biogeochemical variables to climate-induced hydrological changes were assessed using climate forcing based on twelve projections of precipitation and temperature (BC-CORDEX) for the stabilization (RCP 4.5) and the increasing (RCP 8.5) CO2 emission scenarios. Beyond the amount of nutrients delivered to the sea, we calculated the indicator of coastal eutrophication potential (ICEP). The models run with the RCP4.5 stabilization scenario show low variations in hydrological regimes and water quality, while five of the six models run with the increasing CO2 emissions scenario (RCP8.5) leads to more intense extreme streamflow (i.e., higher maximum flows, lower and longer minimum flows), resulting in the degradation of water quality. For the driest RCP 8.5 projection, median biogeochemical impacts induced by decreasing discharge (until -270 m3 s-1 in average) are mostly located downstream of major wastewater treatment plants. During spring bloom, e.g., in May, the associated higher residence time leads to an increase of phytoplankton biomass (+31% in average), with a simultaneous -23% decrease of silicic acid, followed downstream by a -9% decrease of oxygen. Later during low flow, major increases in nitrate and phosphate concentrations (until +19% and +32% in average) are expected. For all considered scenarios, high ICEP values (above zero) lasted, indicating that coastal eutrophication is not expected to decrease with changing hydrological conditions in the future. Maximum values are even expected to be higher some years. This study deliberately evaluates the impact of modified hydrology on biogeochemistry without considering the simultaneous alteration of water temperatures, in order to disentangle the causes of climate change-induced impact. It will serve as a first comparative step toward a more complete modeling experiment of climate change impacts on aquatic systems.
Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2017
Mélanie Raimonet; Ludovic Oudin; Vincent Thieu; Marie Silvestre; Robert Vautard; Christophe Rabouille; Patrick Le Moigne
AbstractThe number and refinement of gridded meteorological datasets are on the rise at the global and regional scales. Although these datasets are now commonly used for hydrological modeling, the representation of precipitation amount and timing is crucial to correctly model streamflow. The Genie Rural a 4 parametres journalier (GR4J) conceptual hydrological model combined with the CEMANEIGE snow routine was calibrated using four temperature and precipitation datasets [Systeme d’analyse fournissant des renseignements atmospheriques a la neige (SAFRAN), Mesoscale Analysis (MESAN), E-OBS, and Water and Global Change (WATCH) Forcing Data ERA-Interim (WFDEI)] on 931 French gauged catchments ranging in size from 10 to 10 000 km2. The efficiency of the calibrated hydrological model in simulating streamflow was higher for the models calibrated on high-resolution meteorological datasets (SAFRAN, MESAN) compared to coarse-resolution datasets (E-OBS, WFDEI), as well as for reanalysis (SAFRAN, MESAN, WFDEI) compare...
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2009
Gilles Billen; Vincent Thieu; Josette Garnier; Marie Silvestre
Science of The Total Environment | 2007
Gilles Billen; Josette Garnier; Jean-Marie Mouchel; Marie Silvestre
Agriculture, Ecosystems & Environment | 2009
Josette Garnier; Gilles Billen; Guillaume Vilain; Anun Martinez; Marie Silvestre; Emmanuelle M. Mounier; Florent Toche
Biogeosciences | 2011
Gilles Billen; Josette Garnier; Vincent Thieu; Marie Silvestre; Sabine Barles; Petros Chatzimpiros
Environmental Science & Policy | 2016
Estela Romero; Romain Le Gendre; Josette Garnier; Gilles Billen; Cédric Fisson; Marie Silvestre; Philippe Riou
Environmental Science & Policy | 2016
Josette Garnier; Juliette Anglade; Marie Benoit; Gilles Billen; Thomas Puech; Antsiva Ramarson; Paul Passy; Marie Silvestre; Luis Lassaletta; Jean-Marie Trommenschlager; Céline Schott; Gaëlle Tallec
Biogeochemistry | 2013
Josette Garnier; Guillaume Vilain; Marie Silvestre; Gilles Billen; Stefan Jehanno; Dominique Poirier; Anun Martinez; Celine Decuq; Pierre Cellier; Gwenaël Abril