List of works by Daniel Viviroli

An introduction to the hydrological modelling system PREVAH and its pre- and post-processing-tools

article

Climate change and mountain water resources: overview and recommendations for research, management and policy

scholarly article by Daniel Viviroli et al published 4 February 2011 in Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

Climate change risks pushing one-third of global food production outside the safe climatic space

scientific article published on 14 May 2021

Comprehensive space–time hydrometeorological simulations for estimating very rare floods at multiple sites in a large river basin

scientific article published in 2022

Flood type specific construction of synthetic design hydrographs

Global monthly water stress: 2. Water demand and severity of water stress

How does climate change affect mesoscale catchments in Switzerland? – a framework for a comprehensive assessment

article

Identification of Flood Reactivity Regions via the Functional Clustering of Hydrographs

Importance and vulnerability of the world's water towers

scientific article published on 09 December 2019

Increasing dependence of lowland populations on mountain water resources

scientific article published on 06 July 2020

Influence of internal variability on population exposure to hydroclimatic changes

scientific article published on 28 March 2017

Marked isotopic variability within and between the Amazon River and marine dissolved black carbon pools

scientific article published on 05 September 2019

Mountains of the world, water towers for humanity: Typology, mapping, and global significance

On the risk of obtaining misleading results by pooling streamflow data for trend analyses

Relating climate change signals and physiographic catchment properties to clustered hydrological response types

article

Seasonality and magnitude of floods in Switzerland under future climate change

article

The hydrological significance of mountains: from regional to global scale

The importance of glacier and forest change in hydrological climate-impact studies

The potential for snow to supply human water demand in the present and future