Person

Prof. Doerthe Tetzlaff

Leibniz-Institut für Gewässerökologie und Binnenfischerei (IGB)

Werdegang

Since 2019           Honorary Professor, University of Aberdeen, Scotland

Since 2017           Head of the Department of Ecohydrology at Leibniz Institute of Freshwater Ecology & Inland Fisheries, Berlin, Germany
and Full Professor (W3) of Ecohydrology at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Germany

2010-2019            Full University Professor of Hydrology and Landscape Ecology, University of Aberdeen, Scotland (since 2017 20%)

2009 - 2010          Reader (Associate Professor) in Hydrology, University of Aberdeen, Scotland

2007 - 2009          Lecturer (Assistant Professor) in Hydrology, University of Aberdeen, Scotland

 

2013                     DSc (Doctor of Science): Hydrology, University of Aberdeen
‘Tracing connections between landscapes and riverscapes: conceptualising the links between catchment hydrology and in-stream ecology’

2004                     PhD (Dr.rer.nat): Hydrology, University of Freiburg
‘Ecologically meaningful hydrological assessment of flow dynamics in urban rivers’

1999                     MSc: Physical Geography & Landscape Ecology, 1st Class, University of Hanover
Master thesis conducted at CSIRO Land & Water ‘Davies Lab’ Tonwsville, Queensland Australia; ‘Assessment of runoff generation and groundwater recharge beneath sugar cane in the Ripple Creek subcatchment, Queensland’ (1998)

1994                     BSc: Geography, 1st Class, University of Potsdam

Mitgliedschaften (maximal 5)

·       American Geophysical Union  (AGU)

·       European Geosciences Union (EGU)

·       International Association of Hydrological Sciences (IAHS)

·       German Hydrological Society (DHG)

·       Arbeitsgemeinschaft Stabile Isotope ASI / German Association for Stable Isotope Research

Publikationen (maximal 5)

Smith AA, Tetzlaff D, Maneta M, Soulsby C. (2022) Critical zone response times and water age relationships under variable catchment wetness states: insights using a tracer-aided ecohydrological model. Water Resources Research, https://doi.org/10.1029/2021WR030584

Yang X, Tetzlaff D, Soulsby C, Smith A, Borchardt D. (2021) Catchment functioning under prolonged drought stress: tracer-aided ecohydrological modelling in an intensively managed agricultural catchment. Water Resources Research. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020WR029094

Levia DF, Creed IF, Hannah DM, Nanko K, Boyer EW, Carlyle-Moses DE, Giesen van de N, Grasso D, Guswa AJ, Hudson JE, Hudson SA, Shin’ichi I, Jackson R, Katul G, Tomo’omi K, Llorens P, Lopes Ribeiro F, Pataki DE, Peters CA, Sanchez Carretero D, Selker JS, Tetzlaff D, Zalewski M. Bruen M. (2020) Homogenization of the terrestrial water cycle. Nature Geosciences, DOI: 10.1038/s41561-020-0641-y

Smith AA, Tetzlaff D, Kleine L, Maneta M, Soulsby C. (2020) Isotope-aided modelling of ecohydrologic fluxes and water ages under mixed land use in Central Europe: the 2018 drought and its recovery. Hydrological Processes, https://doi.org/10.1002/hyp.13838

Tetzlaff D, Carey S, McNamara J, Laudon H, Soulsby C. (2017) The essential value of long-term experimental data for hydrology and water management. Water Resources Research, doi: 10.1002/2017WR020838