Huvudinnehåll

Berit Arheimer

Uppdaterad

Publicerad

Fil.dr, professor och strategisk ledare vid SMHIs hydrologiska forskningsenhet.

Porträtt Berit Arheimer.

Berit Arheimer

Verksamhetsområden

  • Professor i hydrologi och strategisk ledare.
  • Medlem av ledningsgruppen för hydrologiska forskningsenheten.
  • Projektkoordinator.
  • Extern kommunikation.

Expertis

  • Hydrologi och hydrologisk modellering i olika skalor (lokal, regional, global).
  • Hydrologiska prediktioner och prognoser.
  • Bedömning av hydrologiska effekter orsakade av klimatförändringar, vattenhantering eller försämring av vattenkvaliteten.
  • Utveckling av klimattjänster, särskilt för vattensektorn.

Särskilda meriter

  • Inledde utvecklingen av HYPE och introducerade webbplatser för distribution av öppna data och öppen källkod.
  • 105 vetenskapligt granskade publikationer i Web of Science.
  • President för International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) 2021-2025.
  • Sakkunningprövad professor.
  • Vinnare av EGU Darcy Medal 2021: ”for scientific leadership in policy-relevant large-scale modelling of water quality and quantity, promotion of open hydrology, and excellence in managing research groups.
  • Hedersdoktor vid Córdobas Universitet, Spanien.

Senaste publikationer

ROBIN

S. Turner, J. Hannaford, L. J. Barker, G. Suman, A. Killeen, R. Armitage, W. Chan, H. Davies, A. Griffin, A. Kumar, H. Dixon, M. T. D. Albuquerque, N. Almeida Ribeiro, C. Alvarez-Garreton, E. Amoussou, Berit Arheimer, Y. Asano, T. Berezowski, A. Bodian, H. Boutaghane, Réne Capell, H. Dakhaoui, J. Danhelka, H. X. Do, C. Ekkawatpanit, E. M. El Khalki, A. K. Fleig, R. Fonseca, J. D. Giraldo-Osorio, A. B. T. Goula, M. Hanel, S. Horton, C. Kan, D. G. Kingston, G. Laaha, R. Laugesen, W. Lopes, S. Mager, M. Rachdane, Y. Markonis, L. Medeiro, G. Midgley, C. Murphy, P. O'Connor, A. I. Pedersen, H. T. Pham, M. Piniewski, B. Renard, M. E. Saidi, P. Schmocker-Fackel, K. Stahl, M. Thyer, M. Toucher, Y. Tramblay, J. Uusikivi, N. Venegas-Cordero, S. Visessri, A. Watson, S. Westra, P. H. Whitfield

I: Scientific Data, Vol. 12, No. 1

2025

DOI: 10.1038/s41597-025-04907-y

Human-induced warming is modifying the water cycle. Adaptation to posed threats requires an understanding of hydrological responses to climate variability. Whilst these can be computationally modelled, observed streamflow data is essential for constraining models, and understanding and quantifying emerging trends in the water cycle. To date, the identification of such trends at the global scale has been hindered by data limitations - in particular, the prevalence of direct human influences on streamflow which can obscure climate-driven variability. By removing these influences, trends in streamflow data can be more confidently attributed to climate variability. Here we describe the Reference Observatory of Basins for INternational hydrological climate change detection (ROBIN) - the first iteration of a global network of streamflow data from national reference hydrological networks (RHNs) - comprised of catchments which are near-natural or have limited human influences. This collaboration has established a freely available global RHN dataset of over 3,000 catchments and code libraries, which can be used to underpin new science endeavours and advance change detection studies to support international climate policy and adaptation.

Panta Rhei

Heidi Kreibich, Murugesu Sivapalan, Amir Aghakouchak, Nans Addor, Hafzullah Aksoy, Berit Arheimer, Karsten Arnbjerg-Nielsen, Cynthia Vail-Castro, Christophe Cudennec, Mariana Madruga de Brito, Giuliano Di Baldassarre, David C. Finger, Keirnan Fowler, Wouter Knoben, Tobias Krueger, Junguo Liu, Elena Macdonald, Hilary Mcmillan, E. Mario Mendiondo, Alberto Montanari, Marc F. Muller, Saket Pande, Fuqiang Tian, Alberto Viglione, Yongping Wei, Attilio Castellarin, Daniel Peter Loucks, Taikan Oki, Maria J. Polo, Huub Savenije, Anne F. Van Loon, Ankit Agarwal, Camila Alvarez-Garreton, Ana Andreu, Marlies H. Barendrecht, Manuela Brunner, Louise Cavalcante, Yonca Cavus, Serena Ceola, Pedro Chaffe, Xi Chen, Gemma Coxon, Zhao Dandan, Kamran Davary, Moctar Dembele, Benjamin Dewals, Tatiana Frolova (Bibikova), Animesh K. Gain, Alexander Gelfan, Mohammad Ghoreishi, Thomas Grabs, Xiaoxiang Guan, David M. Hannah, Joerg Helmschrot, Britta Hoellermann, Jean Hounkpe, Elizabeth Koebele, Megan Konar, Frederik Kratzert, Sara Lindersson, Maria Carmen Llasat, Alessia Matano, Maurizio Mazzoleni, Alfonso Mejia, Pablo Mendoza, Bruno Merz, Jenia Mukherjee, Farzin Nasiri Saleh, Bertil Nlend, Rodric Merime Nonki, Christina Orieschnig, Katerina Papagiannaki, Gopal Penny, Olga Petrucci, Rafael Pimentel, Sandra Pool, Elena Ridolfi, Maria Rusca, Nivedita Sairam, Adarsh Sankaran Namboothiri, Ana Carolina Sarmento Buarque, Elisa Savelli, Lukas Schoppa, Kai Schroeter, Anna Scolobig, Mojtaba Shafiei, Anna E. Sikorska-Senoner, Magdalena Smigaj, Claudia Teutschbein, Thomas Thaler, Andrijana Todorovic, Faranak Tootoonchi, Roshanak Tootoonchi, Elena Toth, Ronald van Nooijen, Franciele Maria Vanelli, Nicolas Vasquez, David W. Walker, Marthe Wens, David J. Yu, Heidar Zarei, Changrang Zhou, Guenter Bloeschl

I: Hydrological Sciences Journal

2025

DOI: 10.1080/02626667.2025.2469762

To better understand the increasing human impact on the water cycle and the feedbacks between hydrology and society, the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS) organized the scientific decade "Panta Rhei - Everything Flows: Change in hydrology and society" (2013-2022). A key finding is the need to use integrated approaches to assess the co-evolution of human-water systems in order to avoid unintended consequences of human interventions over long periods of time. Additionally, substantial progress has been made in leveraging new data sources on human behaviour, e.g. through text mining of social media posts. Much has been learned about detecting hydrological changes and attributing them to their drivers, e.g. quantifying climate effects on floods. To achieve further progress, we recommend broadening the understanding, the discipline and training activities, while at the same time pursuing synthesis by focusing on key themes, developing innovative approaches and finding sustainable solutions to the world's water problems.

The IAHS Science for Solutions decade, with Hydrology Engaging Local People IN one Global world (HELPING)

Berit Arheimer, Christophe Cudennec, Attilio Castellarin, Salvatore Grimaldi, Kate V. Heal, Claire Lupton, Archana Sarkar, Fuqiang Tian, Jean-Marie Kileshye Onema, Stacey Archfield, Guenter Bloeschl, Pedro L. Borges Chaffe, Barry F. W. Croke, Moctar Dembele, Chris Leong, Ana Mijic, Giovanny M. Mosquera, Bertil Nlend, Adeyemi O. Olusola, Maria J. Polo, Melody Sandells, Justin Sheffield, Theresa C. van Hateren, Mojtaba Shafiei, Soham Adla, Ankit Agarwal, Cristina Aguilar, Jafet Andersson, Cynthia Andraos, Ana Andreu, Francesco Avanzi, Ryan R. Bart, Alena Bartosova, Okke Batelaan, James C. Bennett, Miriam Bertola, Nejc Bezak, Judith Boekee, Thom Bogaard, Martijn J. Booij, Pierre Brigode, Wouter Buytaert, Konstantine Bziava, Giulio Castelli, Cyndi V. Castro, Natalie C. Ceperley, Sivarama K. R. Chidepudi, Francis H. S. Chiew, Kwok P. Chun, Addisu G. Dagnew, B. W. Dekongmen, Manuel Del Jesus, Alain Dezetter, Jose A. Do Nascimento Batista, Rebecca C. Doble, Nilay Dogulu, Joris P. C. Eekhout, Alper Elci, Maria Elenius, David C. Finger, Aldo Fiori, Svenja Fischer, Kristian Foerster, Daniele Ganora, Emna Gargouri Ellouze, Mohammad Ghoreishi, Natasha Harvey, Markus Hrachowitz, Mahesh Jampani, Fernando Jaramillo, Harro J. Jongen, Kola Y. Kareem, Usman T. Khan, Sina Khatami, Daniel G. Kingston, Gerbrand Koren, Stefan Krause, Heidi Kreibich, Julien Lerat, Junguo Liu, Suxia Liu, Mariana Madruga de Brito, Gil Mahe, Hodson Makurira, Paola Mazzoglio, Mohammad Merheb, Ashish Mishra, Hiba Mohammad, Alberto Montanari, Never Mujere, Ehsan Nabavi, Albert Nkwasa, Maria E. Orduna Alegria, Christina Orieschnig, Valeriya Ovcharuk, Santosh S. Palmate, Saket Pande, Shachi Pandey, Georgia Papacharalampous, Ilias Pechlivanidis, Gopal Penny, Rafael Pimentel, David A. Post, Cristina Prieto, Saman Razavi, Sergio Salazar-Galan, Adarsh Sankaran Namboothiri, Pedro P. Santos, Hubert Savenije, Nura J. Shanono, Ashutosh Sharma, Murugesu Sivapalan, Zhanibek Smagulov, Jan Szolgay, Jin Teng, Adriaan J. Teuling, Claudia Teutschbein, Hristos Tyralis, Ann van Griensven, Andries J. van Schalkwyk, Marit van Tiel, Alberto Viglione, Elena Volpi, Thorsten Wagener, Xiaojun Wang, Lan Wang-Erlandsson, Marthe Wens, Jun Xia

I: Hydrological Sciences Journal, Vol. 69, No. 11

2024

DOI: 10.1080/02626667.2024.2355202

Relaterade sidor

  • Forskning och utveckling

    Hydrologi

    SMHIs hydrologiska forskningsenhet sammanställer, skapar och förmedlar kunskap om sötvatten till samhället på olika tids- och rumskalor.

Relaterade länkar