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Analysis of high streamflow extremes in climate change studies: how do we calibrate hydrological models?

Bruno Majone, Diego Avesani, Patrick Zulian, Aldo Fiori, Alberto Bellin

2022Hydrology and earth system sciences41 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract. Climate change impact studies on hydrological extremes often rely on hydrological models with parameters inferred through calibration procedures using observed meteorological data as input forcing. We show that this procedure can lead to a biased evaluation of the probability distribution of high streamflow extremes when climate models are used. As an alternative approach, we introduce a methodology, coined “Hydrological Calibration of eXtremes” (HyCoX), in which the calibration of the hydrological model, as driven by climate model output, is carried out by maximizing the probability that the modeled and observed high streamflow extremes belong to the same statistical population. The application to the Adige River catchment (southeastern Alps, Italy) by means of HYPERstreamHS, a distributed hydrological model, showed that this procedure preserves statistical coherence and produces reliable quantiles of the annual maximum streamflow to be used in assessment studies.

Topics & Concepts

StreamflowQuantileEnvironmental scienceClimate changeCalibrationClimatologyForcing (mathematics)Climate modelPopulationHydrological modellingDrainage basinStatisticsGeologyGeographyMathematicsCartographyOceanographySociologyDemographyHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesHydrology and Drought AnalysisHydrological Forecasting Using AI
Analysis of high streamflow extremes in climate change studies: how do we calibrate hydrological models? | Litcius