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Dr. León-Muñoz, Jorge
Nombre de publicación
Dr. León-Muñoz, Jorge
Nombre completo
León Muñoz, Jorge Eduardo
Facultad
Email
jleon@ucsc.cl
ORCID
2 results
Research Outputs
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
- PublicationPatagoniaMet: A multi-source hydrometeorological dataset for Western Patagonia(Springer Nature Limited, 2024)
; ;Aguayo, Rodrigo ;Aguayo, Mauricio ;Baez-Villanueva, Oscar ;Zambrano-Bigiarini, Mauricio ;Fernández, AlfonsoJacques-Coper, MartinWestern Patagonia (40–56°S) is a clear example of how the systematic lack of publicly available data and poor quality control protocols have hindered further hydrometeorological studies. To address these limitations, we present PatagoniaMet (PMET), a compilation of ground-based hydrometeorological data (PMET-obs; 1950–2020), and a daily gridded product of precipitation and temperature (PMET-sim; 1980–2020). PMET-obs was developed considering a 4-step quality control process applied to 523 hydrometeorological time series obtained from eight institutions in Chile and Argentina. Following current guidelines for hydrological datasets, several climatic and geographic attributes were derived for each catchment. PMET-sim was developed using statistical bias correction procedures, spatial regression models and hydrological methods, and was compared against other bias-corrected alternatives using hydrological modelling. PMET-sim was able to achieve Kling-Gupta efficiencies greater than 0.7 in 72% of the catchments, while other alternatives exceeded this threshold in only 50% of the catchments. PatagoniaMet represents an important milestone in the availability of hydro-meteorological data that will facilitate new studies in one of the largest freshwater ecosystems in the world. - PublicationLandscape dependency of land-based salmon farming under climate change(Climate Risk Managemen, 2023)
; ;Aguayo, Rodrigo ;Soto, Doris ;Avendaño-Herrera, Ruben ;Nimptsch, Jorge ;Wolfl, Stefan ;Simon, Jeanne ;Echeverría, Cristian ;Aguayo, Mauricio ;Salazar, Cesar ;Garay, OscarFox, SageThe success of Chilean salmon farming’s early cultivation stages is largely facilitated by access to high-quality water, which is provisioned by watersheds dominated by native forests and defined by high precipitation levels. In recent decades, human activities have increasingly affected both attributes. This study analyzed the risk of climate change in 123 watersheds that supply water to land-based salmon farms in south-central Chile (36.5 43◦S). The risk was calculated based on exposure (fingerling and smolt production), sensitivity (land cover maps for three time periods), and hazard indicators (four climate change indicators). The results show a disturbing reality: under a high emissions scenario (RCP 8.5), more than 50% of the current fingerling and smolts production would be located in high or very high-risk areas. These projections are the result of both a drier and warmer climate as well as the continued processes of deforestation and fragmentation of native forests, a spatio-temporal combination which could limit the availability and quality of the water needed for optimal aquaculture production. The risk analysis suggests that landscape configuration may be a potential alternative to mitigate the consequences of climate change on Chilean salmon farming. This is particularly important in areas such as south-central Chile, where the current watershed management and/or conservation strategies do not ensure landscapes resilient to projected hydroclimatic changes.