scholarly journals A multi‐scale study of the dominant catchment characteristics impacting low‐flow metrics

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marius G. Floriancic ◽  
Daniel Spies ◽  
H. J. (Ilja) van Meerveld ◽  
Peter Molnar
2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (5) ◽  
pp. 386-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. H. Saliha ◽  
S. B. Awulachew ◽  
J. Cullmann ◽  
Hans-B. Horlacher

The prediction of hydrological variables for ungauged basins is still a big challenge. Regionalization is the most widely used method to date, which relates parameters of watershed models to catchment characteristics. Relating catchment characteristics to watershed model parameters is too difficult for distributed hydrological models, due to the heterogeneous nature of catchments. A regional model was proposed by coupling a Kohonen neural network (KNN) and distributed Water Balance Simulation Model (WaSiM-ETH) to estimate flow in ungauged basin. KNN was used to delineate a hydrological homogeneous group based on predefined physical characteristics of catchments and WaSiM-ETH was applied to generate daily stream flow. Twenty-six subcatchments of the Blue Nile River basin, Ethiopia, were grouped into five hydrological homogenous groups, each with its own full set of optimized WaSiM-ETH parameters. In the regional model, the KNN assigned the ungauged catchment into one of the five hydrological homogenous groups. The whole set of optimized WaSiM parameters from the homogeneous group (which the ungauged river belongs to) were transferred to the ungauged river and WaSiM-ETH was used to compute the flow for this ungauged river. The regional model generally overestimated the low flow. In general, the results for validation subcatchments showed the regional model is satisfactory in transferring information from data-rich to data-poor catchments.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandra Nauditt ◽  
Hamish Hann ◽  
Marko Kallio

<p>Although water-rich, tropical regions are facing severe drought disasters worldwide, especially during their dry seasons. To design site appropriate adaptation measures, a profound understanding of spatially varying hydrological drought severity and frequency is of crucial importance. However, low flow behaviour can strongly vary in space and time, depending on catchment characteristics, but discharge datasets of high temporal and spatial resolution needed for its assessment are rarely available. Our objective was therefore to provide hydrological drought hazard information to detect hydrological drought anomalies in quickly responding tropical environments.</p><p>We used daily discharge time series of an unregulated rural tropical test catchment, the Muriaé in southeast Brazil, to calibrate the semi distributed hydrological model SWAT2012. For the outlets of 93 hydrological response units, we simulated discharges to obtain an adequate spatial distribution. The hydrostreamer 4.0 downscaling approach (https://github.com/mkkallio/hydrostreamer) was applied to the ISIMIP 2a global discharge data product and calibrated with discharge observations and the simulations. Downscaling to a resolution of 450 m was carried out by evaluating the relationship between a spatial unit of discharge and the overlaid river network. To assess hydrological drought hazard, we applied the daily variable Q95 threshold to the dry season flow time series for each grid cell (0.1°). Drought events were defined for periods when the discharge values fell below this dry season threshold during 5 days (and 12 days respectively). To further understand the role of catchment characteristics in low flow evolvement, we tested the sensitivity of different climate and catchment related model input variables against low flow events and simulated artificial drought risk scenarios.</p><p>Drought hazard assessment results showed the largest number of drought events in the downstream area, probably attributed to geological and tectonic fracturation and hence increased infiltration, followed by the Western upstream region – that could be linked to  smaller subcatchment sizes and lower precipitation inputs. <br>Only limited hydrological drought sensitivity of the system against changes in land cover type and temperature was found in the model results, while geology and soils turned out to play a larger role for low flows. The drought scenarios also indicated that low flows were more severely affected than high flows by climatic changes such as decreased precipitation.</p><p>Our findings related to the ocurrence of hydrological hazards in the region coincide with institutional records by government institutions (CEMADEM), newspaper reports and stakeholder communication about water shortage in communes and districts.  We conclude that the here presented hydrological drought assessment approach provides science based data sets, indicators and information to be used in regional and local drought management in tropical regions.</p>


2007 ◽  
Vol 177 (4S) ◽  
pp. 314-315
Author(s):  
Jose A. Medina Machuca ◽  
Jose A. Medina Coello ◽  
Hugo Manzanilla ◽  
Francisco A. Gutierrez
Keyword(s):  
Low Flow ◽  

2005 ◽  
Vol 25 (1_suppl) ◽  
pp. S678-S678
Author(s):  
Yasuhiro Akazawa ◽  
Yasuhiro Katsura ◽  
Ryohei Matsuura ◽  
Piao Rishu ◽  
Ansar M D Ashik ◽  
...  

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