- ORCID iD
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0000-0001-6186-5751
- Bio (via ORCID)
- Climate change and population growth are great threats to society that join together in their impacts on hydrology: climate change affecting water availability, population growth increasing demand. This conjuncture has led to the rise of a new hydrological discipline, lying at the interface between conventional hydrology, plant ecology and climate science. This discipline, often referred to as climate hydrology, conceives hydrological systems as part of the Earth's global system, being impacted by anthropogenic climate and land-use change, as well as influencing a number of hydrometeorological extremes and land-atmospheric feedbacks. Current research within this new field aims at improving our understanding of the interactions between the hydrosphere, biosphere and atmosphere, with the overarching objective of enhancing our capacity to predict and adapt to ongoing Earth’s system changes. My scientific interests strive to that direction. They extend from the specific use of satellites to analyse soil-vegetation-atmosphere interactions to the general understanding of the global dynamics of the water cycle.
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Heat Waves: Physical Understanding and Scientific Challenges
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
High-resolution (1 km) Koppen-Geiger maps for 1901-2099 based on constrained CMIP6 projections.
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Wildfire precursors show complementary predictability in different timescales
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Land-atmosphere feedbacks contribute to crop failure in global rainfed breadbaskets
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
A Lagrangian analysis of the sources of rainfall over the horn of Africa drylands
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Disentangling the role of forest structure and functional traits in the thermal balance of the Mediterranean-temperate ecotone
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Combined large-scale tropical and subtropical forcing on the severe 2019–2022 drought in South America
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Incorporating Plant Access to Groundwater in Existing Global, Satellite-Based Evaporation Estimates
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Widespread and complex drought effects on vegetation physiology inferred from space
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- Journal Article
- A1
- open access
Reversed Holocene temperature-moisture relationship in the Horn of Africa