Huvudinnehåll

Andrea Popp

Updated

Published

Ph.D.

Porträtt Andrea Popp.

Andrea Popp

Role in team

  • Research lead: Processes in the ground and their role for surface water
  • Project manager and researcher

Expertise

  • Surface water-groundwater interactions
  • Tracer-aided water source partitioning
  • Cold region hydrology
  • Critical zone research

Latest publications

Recent Advances in Tracer-Aided Mixing Modeling of Water in the Critical Zone

Andrea Popp, Harsh Beria, Matthias Sprenger, Pertti Ala-Aho, Miriam Coenders-Gerrits, Jannis Groh, Julian Klaus, Julia L. A. Knapp, Gerbrand Koren, Iris Bakiri, Esther Xu Fei, Marina Gillon, Ciaran Harman, Christophe Hissler, Tegan Holmes, Ghulam Jeelani, Andis Kalvans, Alessandro Montemagno, Emel Zeray Ozturk, Petra Zvab Rozic, Tricia Stadnyk, Christine Stumpp, Nicolas Valiente, Jana von Freyberg, Polona Vreca, Giulia Zuecco, Ilja van Meerveld, Daniele Penna, James W. Kirchner

In: Reviews of geophysics, Vol. 63, No. 3

2025

DOI: 10.1029/2024RG000866

Cryosphere–groundwater connectivity is a missing link in the mountain water cycle

Marit van Tiel, Caroline Aubry-Wake, Lauren Somers, Christoff Andermann, Francesco Avanzi, Michel Baraer, Gabriele Chiogna, Clémence Daigre, Soumik Das, Fabian Drenkhan, Daniel Farinotti, Catriona L. Fyffe, Inge de Graaf, Sarah Hanus, Walter Immerzeel, Franziska Koch, Jeffrey M. McKenzie, Tom Müller, Andrea Popp, Zarina Saidaliyeva, Bettina Schaefli, Oliver S. Schilling, Kapiolani Teagai, James M. Thornton, Vadim Yapiyev

In: Nature Water, Vol. 2, No. 7

2024

DOI: 10.1038/s44221-024-00277-8

The mountain cryosphere and groundwater play pivotal roles in shaping the hydrological cycle, yet their connectivity remains incompletely understood. Current knowledge on meltwater recharge and consequent groundwater discharge processes is better developed for snow–groundwater connectivity than for glacier–groundwater connectivity. Estimates of meltwater recharge vary considerably, which is probably a function of not only inherent catchment characteristics but also of the different spatio-temporal scales involved and the uncertainties in the methods used. This hinders a comprehensive understanding of the mountain water cycle. As glaciers retreat, permafrost thaws and snowpack diminishes, the relative importance of mountain groundwater is expected to increase. However, shifting and declining recharge from the cryosphere may decrease absolute groundwater amounts and fluxes with as-yet unknown effects on catchment-scale hydrological processes. We therefore stress the need to better quantify mountain cryosphere–groundwater connectivity to predict climate change impacts on mountain water supply and to support sustainable water resource management of downstream socio-ecological systems.