Litcius/Paper detail

Evaluation of rainfall–runoff model performance under non-stationary hydroclimatic conditions

Proloy Deb, Anthony S. Kiem

2020Hydrological Sciences Journal63 citationsDOI

Abstract

Understanding of rainfall–runoff model performance under non-stationary hydroclimatic conditions is limited. This study compared lumped (IHACRES), semi-distributed (HEC-HMS) and fully-distributed (SWATgrid) hydrological models to determine which most realistically simulates runoff in catchments where non-stationarity in rainfall–runoff relationships exists. The models were calibrated and validated under different hydroclimatic conditions (Average, Wet and Dry) for two heterogeneous catchments in southeast Australia (SEA). SWATgrid realistically simulates runoff in the smaller catchment under most hydroclimatic conditions but fails when the model is calibrated in Dry conditions and validated in Wet. All three models perform poorly in the larger catchment irrespective of hydroclimatic conditions. This highlights the need for more research aimed at improving the ability of hydrological models to realistically incorporate the physical processes causing non-stationarity in rainfall–runoff relationships. Although the study is focussed on SEA, the insights gained are useful for all regions which experience large hydroclimatic variability and multi-year/decadal droughts.

Topics & Concepts

Surface runoffEnvironmental scienceRunoff modelClimatologyDrainage basinHydrology (agriculture)Hydrological modellingMeteorologyGeologyGeographyEcologyBiologyGeotechnical engineeringCartographyHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Drought Analysis