“…The strong relationships between plants and hydrology with nutrient cycling, availability and stoichiometry are now additionally being impacted by all those drivers of global change, such as land-use changes, drought, warming, eutrophication or invasive plant species, that alter plant structure and functioning, the hydrological cycle and nutrient availability itself. Land-use changes and water pollution related to urban and agricultural loadings (Mulholland et al, 1997;Sobota et al, 2009), increases in livestock (Chartier et al, 2011), changes in species distribution and the frequency of fire (Engel et al, 2005;Jacobs et al, 2007;Alexander and Arthur, 2010;Smith et al, 2012), forest management (Webb and Kathuria, 2012), land abandonment (Fu et al, 2009) and the intensification of agriculture followed, in most cases, by increases in N in runoff (Sobota et al, 2009) have been the key drivers of global change most studied in relation to shifts in biogeohydrology. We here focus on the impacts from climate change, eutrophication and invasive species on runoff and water redistribution by plants.…”