catchment modelling
Recently Published Documents


TOTAL DOCUMENTS

61
(FIVE YEARS 10)

H-INDEX

15
(FIVE YEARS 4)

2020 ◽  
Vol 134 ◽  
pp. 104812
Author(s):  
Celray James Chawanda ◽  
Chris George ◽  
Wim Thiery ◽  
Ann van Griensven ◽  
Jaclyn Tech ◽  
...  

AMBIO ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (11) ◽  
pp. 1710-1721 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jelena Rakovic ◽  
Martyn N. Futter ◽  
Katarina Kyllmar ◽  
Katri Rankinen ◽  
Marc I. Stutter ◽  
...  

Abstract Further development of the bioeconomy, the substitution of bioresources for fossil resources, will lead to an increased pressure on land and water resources in both agriculture and forestry. It is important to study whether resultant changes in land management may in turn lead to impairment of water services. This paper describes the Nordic Bioeconomy Pathways (NBPs), a set of regional sectoral storylines nested within the global Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSP) framework developed to provide the BIOWATER research program with land management scenarios for projecting future developments to explore possible conflicts between land management changes and the Water Framework Directive (WFD). The NBPs are a set of narrative storylines capturing a range of plausible future trajectories for the Nordic bioeconomy until 2050 and that are fit for use within hydrological catchment modelling, ecosystem service studies and stakeholder dialogue about possible changes in agricultural and forestry management practices.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daryl Hughes ◽  
Geoff Parkin ◽  
Stephen Birkinshaw

<p>The hydrological regimes of European catchments have been considerably modified by anthropogenic features such as dams, weirs and water abstractions, with nearly every major river fragmented. The negative impacts of such physical modifications on freshwater ecosystems are being increasingly recognised. Currently, European dam removal initiatives are being driven by factors such as the EU Habitats Directive, and the costs associated with maintaining redundant infrastructure. Climate change and the rewilding agenda may encourage further hydrological renaturalisation initiatives. In the English Lake District, several reservoirs are being actively considered for decommissioning within this decade. To understand how such catchments would respond to lake renaturalisation, robust catchment hydrology models are needed that can represent the effects of changes in physical infrastructure on the hydrological regime. However, many models tend to neglect such human impacts.</p><p>We present a new tool that incorporates reservoirs, including impounding structures, river regulations and abstractions. The method involved development of an enhanced version of the freely-available catchment modelling software, SHETRAN. A new ‘reservoir’ module was developed which includes the effects of hydraulic structures and sluice operations on lake stage and river flow. Results for the Crummock Water catchment and reservoir show that the reservoir model generates notably fitter simulations, particularly during dry periods where reservoir operations cause a distinct deviation from the regime expected in natural lake-river systems. Further simulations demonstrate quantitatively how lake renaturalisation might affect future hydrological regimes compared with the baseline scenario. Finally, we discuss the implications of this model for decision-making in the Crummock Water catchment, and the utility of the software for other anthropologically-modified catchments.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 535-559 ◽  
Author(s):  
Berit Arheimer ◽  
Rafael Pimentel ◽  
Kristina Isberg ◽  
Louise Crochemore ◽  
Jafet C. M. Andersson ◽  
...  

Abstract. Recent advancements in catchment hydrology (such as understanding catchment similarity, accessing new data sources, and refining methods for parameter constraints) make it possible to apply catchment models for ungauged basins over large domains. Here we present a cutting-edge case study applying catchment-modelling techniques with evaluation against river flow at the global scale for the first time. The modelling procedure was challenging but doable, and even the first model version showed better performance than traditional gridded global models of river flow. We used the open-source code of the HYPE model and applied it for >130 000 catchments (with an average resolution of 1000 km2), delineated to cover the Earth's landmass (except Antarctica). The catchments were characterized using 20 open databases on physiographical variables, to account for spatial and temporal variability of the global freshwater resources, based on exchange with the atmosphere (e.g. precipitation and evapotranspiration) and related budgets in all compartments of the land (e.g. soil, rivers, lakes, glaciers, and floodplains), including water stocks, residence times, and the pathways between various compartments. Global parameter values were estimated using a stepwise approach for groups of parameters regulating specific processes and catchment characteristics in representative gauged catchments. Daily and monthly time series (>10 years) from 5338 gauges of river flow across the globe were used for model evaluation (half for calibration and half for independent validation), resulting in a median monthly KGE of 0.4. However, the World-Wide HYPE (WWH) model shows large variation in model performance, both between geographical domains and between various flow signatures. The model performs best (KGE >0.6) in the eastern USA, Europe, South-East Asia, and Japan, as well as in parts of Russia, Canada, and South America. The model shows overall good potential to capture flow signatures of monthly high flows, spatial variability of high flows, duration of low flows, and constancy of daily flow. Nevertheless, there remains large potential for model improvements, and we suggest both redoing the parameter estimation and reconsidering parts of the model structure for the next WWH version. This first model version clearly indicates challenges in large-scale modelling, usefulness of open data, and current gaps in process understanding. However, we also found that catchment modelling techniques can contribute to advance global hydrological predictions. Setting up a global catchment model has to be a long-term commitment as it demands many iterations; this paper shows a first version, which will be subjected to continuous model refinements in the future. WWH is currently shared with regional/local modellers to appreciate local knowledge.


2019 ◽  
Vol 158 ◽  
pp. 46-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonio M. Moreno-Rodenas ◽  
Franz Tscheikner-Gratl ◽  
Jeroen G. Langeveld ◽  
Francois H.L.R. Clemens

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Berit Arheimer ◽  
Rafael Pimentel ◽  
Kristina Isberg ◽  
Louise Crochemore ◽  
Jafet C. M. Andersson ◽  
...  

Abstract. Recent advancements in catchment hydrology (such as understanding hydrological processes, accessing new data sources, and refining methods for parameter constraints) make it possible to apply catchment models for ungauged basins over large domains. Here we present a cutting-edge case study applying catchment-modelling techniques at the global scale for the first time. The modelling procedure was challenging but doable and even the first model version show better performance than traditional gridded global models of river flow. We used the open-source code of the HYPE model and applied it for > 130 000 catchments (with an average resolution of 1000 km2), delineated to cover the Earths landmass (except Antarctica). The catchments were characterized using 20 open databases on physiographical variables, to account for spatial and temporal variability of the global freshwater resources, based on exchange with the atmosphere (e.g. precipitation and evapotranspiration) and related budgets in all compartments of the land (e.g. soil, rivers, lakes, glaciers, and floodplains), including water stocks, residence times, interfacial fluxes, and the pathways between various compartments. Global parameter values were estimated using a step-wise approach for groups of parameters regulating specific processes and catchment characteristics in representative gauged catchments. Daily time-series (> 10 years) from 5338 gauges of river flow across the globe were used for model evaluation (half for calibration and half for independent validation), resulting in an average monthly KGE of 0.4. However, the world-wide HYPE (WWH) model shows large variation in model performance, both between geographical domains and between various flow signatures. The model performs best in Eastern USA, Europe, South-East Asia, and Japan, as well as in parts of Russia, Canada, and South America. The model shows overall good potential to capture flow signatures of monthly high flows, spatial variability of high flows, duration of low flows and constancy of daily flow. Nevertheless, there remains large potential for model improvements and we suggest both redoing the calibration and reconsidering parts of the model structure for the next WWH version. The calibration cycle should be repeated a couple of times to find robust values under new fixed parameter conditions. For the next iteration, special focus will be given to precipitation, evapotranspiration, soil storage, and dynamics from hydrological features, such as lakes, reservoirs, glaciers, and floodplains. This first model version clearly indicates challenges in large scale modelling, usefulness of open data and current gaps in processes understanding. Parts of the WWH can be shared with other modellers working at the regional scale to appreciate local knowledge, establish a critical mass of experts and improve the model in a collaborative manner. Setting up a global catchment model has to be a long-term commitment of continuous model refinements to achieve successful and truly useful results.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document