“…Indeed, the difference of temperature measured between an electrically heated and a non-heated FO cable is directly dependent on water fluxes (Bense et al, 2016;Read et al, 2014;Sayde et al, 2015), offering the possibility to determine fluxes and their spatial distribution over a large range with an excellent accuracy (Simon et al, 2021). Active heat tracer experiments using fiber-optic DTS have been used to estimate wind speed in the low atmosphere (Lapo et al, 2020;Sayde et al, 2015), in dam monitoring (Ghafoori et al, 2020;Perzlmaier et al, 2004;Su et al, 2017), for groundwater fluxes measurements in open (Banks et al, 2014;Klepikova et al, 2018;Read et al, 2014Read et al, , 2015 and sealed boreholes (Munn et al, 2020;Selker and Selker, 2018) or else in direct contact within sedimentary aquifers (del Val et al, 2021;des Tombe et al, 2019). Despite promising developments, active-DTS methods have been seldom used in hydrology to estimate groundwater/surface water interactions.…”