Water (Oct 2021)

OpenHi.net: A Synergistically Built, National-Scale Infrastructure for Monitoring the Surface Waters of Greece

  • Nikos Mamassis,
  • Katerina Mazi,
  • Elias Dimitriou,
  • Demetris Kalogeras,
  • Nikolaos Malamos,
  • Spyridon Lykoudis,
  • Antonis Koukouvinos,
  • Ioannis Tsirogiannis,
  • Ino Papageorgaki,
  • Anastasios Papadopoulos,
  • Yiannis Panagopoulos,
  • Demetris Koutsoyiannis,
  • Antonis Christofides,
  • Andreas Efstratiadis,
  • Georgios Vitantzakis,
  • Nikos Kappos,
  • Dimitrios Katsanos,
  • Basil Psiloglou,
  • Evangelos Rozos,
  • Theodora Kopania,
  • Ioannis Koletsis,
  • Antonis D. Koussis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/w13192779
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 19
p. 2779

Abstract

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The large-scale surface-water monitoring infrastructure for Greece Open Hydrosystem Information Network (Openhi.net) is presented in this paper. Openhi.net provides free access to water data, incorporating existing networks that manage their own databases. In its pilot phase, Openhi.net operates three telemetric networks for monitoring the quantity and the quality of surface waters, as well as meteorological and soil variables. Aspiring members must also offer their data for public access. A web-platform was developed for on-line visualization, processing and managing telemetric data. A notification system was also designed and implemented for inspecting the current values of variables. The platform is built upon the web 2.0 technology that exploits the ever-increasing capabilities of browsers to handle dynamic data as a time series. A GIS component offers web-services relevant to geo-information for water bodies. Accessing, querying and downloading geographical data for watercourses (segment length, slope, name, stream order) and for water basins (area, mean elevation, mean slope, basin order, slope, mean CN-curve number) are provided by Web Map Services and Web Feature Services. A new method for estimating the streamflow from measurements of the surface velocity has been advanced as well to reduce hardware expenditures, a low-cost ‘prototype’ hydro-telemetry system (at about half the cost of a comparable commercial system) was designed, constructed and installed at six monitoring stations of Openhi.net.

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