Confirmation of ACRU model results for applications in land use and climate change studies

被引:50
|
作者
Warburton, M. L. [1 ]
Schulze, R. E. [1 ]
Jewitt, G. P. W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ KwaZulu Natal, Sch Bioresources Engn & Environm Hydrol, ZA-3209 Scottsville, South Africa
基金
新加坡国家研究基金会;
关键词
HYDROLOGICAL RESPONSES; RIVER-BASIN; CATCHMENT; IMPACTS; VERIFICATION; COVER; VALIDATION; SIMULATION; SCENARIOS; DISCHARGE;
D O I
10.5194/hess-14-2399-2010
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The hydrological responses of a catchment are sensitive to, and strongly coupled to, land use and climate, and changes thereof. The hydrological responses to the impacts of changing land use and climate will be the result of complex interactions, where the change in one may moderate or exacerbate the effects of the other. Further difficulties in assessing these interactions are that dominant drivers of the hydrological system may vary at different spatial and temporal scales. To assess these interactions, a process-based hydrological model, sensitive to land use and climate, and changes thereof, needs to be used. For this purpose the daily time step ACRU model was selected. However, to be able to use a hydrological model such as ACRU with confidence its representation of reality must be confirmed by comparing simulated output against observations across a range of climatic conditions. Comparison of simulated against observed streamflow was undertaken in three climatically diverse South African catchments, ranging from the semi-arid, sub-tropical Luvuvhu catchment, to the winter rainfall Upper Breede catchment and the sub-humid Mgeni catchment. Not only do the climates of the catchments differ, but their primary land uses also vary. In the upper areas of the Mgeni catchment commercial plantation forestry is dominant, while in the middle reaches there are significant areas of commercial plantation sugarcane and urban areas, while the lower reaches are dominated by urban areas. The Luvuvhu catchment has a large proportion of subsistence agriculture and informal residential areas. In the Upper Breede catchment in the Western Cape, commercial orchards and vineyards are the primary land uses. Overall the ACRU model was able to represent the high, low and total flows, with satisfactory Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency indexes obtained for the selected catchments. The study concluded that the ACRU model can be used with confidence to simulate the streamflows of the three selected catchments and was able to represent the hydrological responses from the range of climates and diversity of land uses present within the catchments.
引用
收藏
页码:2399 / 2414
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Hydrological Impacts of Climate Change and Land Use
    Petrovic, Frantisek
    WATER, 2021, 13 (06)
  • [32] Potential climate forcing of land use and land cover change
    Ward, D. S.
    Mahowald, N. M.
    Kloster, S.
    ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS, 2014, 14 (23) : 12701 - 12724
  • [33] Land use/land cover change and its impacts on climate
    Mahmood, Rezaul
    Pielke, Roger A., Sr.
    Hubbard, Kenneth G.
    GLOBAL AND PLANETARY CHANGE, 2006, 54 (1-2) : VII - VII
  • [34] The land use–climate change–energy nexus
    Virginia H. Dale
    Rebecca A. Efroymson
    Keith L. Kline
    Landscape Ecology, 2011, 26 : 755 - 773
  • [35] Adaptation of Land Use to Climate Change in Russia
    O. E. Sukhoveeva
    Russian Meteorology and Hydrology, 2020, 45 : 830 - 834
  • [36] Land cover, land use, climate change and food security
    Yakubu Aliyu Bununu
    Ashiru Bello
    Adamu Ahmed
    Sustainable Earth Reviews, 6 (1):
  • [37] The influence of land use change on climate in the Sahel
    Taylor, CM
    Lambin, EF
    Stephenne, N
    Harding, RJ
    Essery, RLH
    JOURNAL OF CLIMATE, 2002, 15 (24) : 3615 - 3629
  • [38] Impact of land-use change on climate
    Russell S. Vose
    Thomas R. Karl
    David R. Easterling
    Claude N. Williams
    Matthew J. Menne
    Nature, 2004, 427 : 213 - 214
  • [39] The Nexus of Climate Change, Land Use, and Conflicts
    Rebecca Froese
    Janpeter Schilling
    Current Climate Change Reports, 2019, 5 : 24 - 35
  • [40] Special Report on Climate Change and Land Use
    Bongaarts, John
    POPULATION AND DEVELOPMENT REVIEW, 2019, 45 (04) : 936 - 937