Catchment-scale estimates of flow path partitioning and water storage based on transit time and runoff modelling

被引:61
|
作者
Soulsby, C. [1 ]
Piegat, K. [1 ]
Seibert, J. [2 ]
Tetzlaff, D. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Aberdeen, No Rivers Inst, Sch Geosci, Aberdeen AB24 3UF, Scotland
[2] Univ Zurich, Dept Geog, CH-8057 Zurich, Switzerland
关键词
tracers; transit times; rainfall-runoff modelling; runoff processes; storage; HBV; ungauged basins; PROCESS CONCEPTUALIZATION; RESIDENCE TIMES; SPATIAL INTERPOLATION; STREAM WATER; RAINFALL; TRACER; TOPOGRAPHY; CHLORIDE; CLASSIFICATION; CALIBRATION;
D O I
10.1002/hyp.8324
中图分类号
TV21 [水资源调查与水利规划];
学科分类号
081501 ;
摘要
Tracer-derived mean transit times (MTT) and rainfallrunoff modelling were used to explore stream flow generation in 14 Scottish catchments. Both approaches conceptualise the partitioning, storage, and release of water at the catchment scale. The study catchments were predominantly upland and ranged from 0.5 to 1800?km2. Lumped convolution integral models using tracer inputoutput relationships generally provided well-constrained MTT estimates using a gamma function as the transit time distribution. These ranged from 60?days to >10?years and are mainly controlled by catchment soil cover and drainage density. The HBV model was calibrated using upper and lower storage layers to conceptualise rapidly responding near-surface flow paths and slower groundwater contributions to runoff. Calibrated parameters that regulate groundwater recharge and partitioning between the two storages were reasonably well-identified and correlations with MTTs. The most clearly identified parameters and those with the strongest correlations with MTT and landscape controls (particularly soil cover) were the recession coefficients which control the release of water from the upper and lower storage layers. There was also strong correlation between the dynamic storage estimated by HBV and the total catchment storage inferred by tracer damping, although the latter was usually two orders of magnitude greater. This is explained by the different storages estimated: while the total storage inferred by tracers also includes the passive storage involved in mixing, the model estimates dynamic storage from water balance considerations. The former can be interpreted as relating to total porosity, whereas the latter rather corresponds to the drainable porosity. As MTTs for Scottish the uplands can be estimated from catchment characteristics, landscape analysis can be used to constrain sensitive model parameters when modelling in ungauged basins. Furthermore, the dynamic storage inferred by HBV may also be used to provide a first approximation of minimum total catchment storage. Copyright (c) 2011 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
引用
收藏
页码:3960 / 3976
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Deriving catchment-scale water and energy balance parameters using data assimilation based on extended Kalman filtering
    Boulet, G
    Kerr, Y
    Chehbouni, A
    Kalma, JD
    HYDROLOGICAL SCIENCES JOURNAL-JOURNAL DES SCIENCES HYDROLOGIQUES, 2002, 47 (03): : 449 - 467
  • [32] Climatic Control on Spatial Distribution of Water Storage at the Catchment Scale: A Framework for Unifying Saturation Excess Runoff Models
    Yao, Lili
    Wang, Dingbao
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 2022, 127 (10)
  • [33] Spatially distributed tracer-aided runoff modelling and dynamics of storage and water ages in a permafrost-influenced catchment
    Piovano, Thea, I
    Tetzlaff, Doerthe
    Carey, Sean K.
    Shatilla, Nadine J.
    Smith, Aaron
    Soulsby, Chris
    HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES, 2019, 23 (06) : 2507 - 2523
  • [34] Highly Resolved Runoff Path Simulation Based on Urban Surface Landscape Layout for Sub-Catchment Scale
    Bai, Tian
    Borowiak, Klaudia
    Wu, Yawen
    Zhang, Jingli
    WATER, 2021, 13 (10)
  • [35] Physically-based distributed model for coupled surface runoff and subsurface flow simulation at the catchment scale
    Bixio, AC
    Putti, M
    Orlandini, S
    Paniconi, C
    COMPUTATIONAL METHODS IN WATER RESOURCES, VOLS 1 AND 2: COMPUTATIONAL METHODS FOR SUBSURFACE FLOW AND TRANSPORT - COMPUTATIONAL METHODS, SURFACE WATER SYSTEMS AND HYDROLOGY, 2000, : 1115 - 1122
  • [36] Agent-Based Modelling of a Coupled Water Demand and Supply System at the Catchment Scale
    Huber, Lisa
    Bahro, Nico
    Leitinger, Georg
    Tappeiner, Ulrike
    Strasser, Ulrich
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 11 (21)
  • [37] Flow acoustics modelling and implications for ultrasonic flow measurement based on the transit-time method
    Willatzen, M
    ULTRASONICS, 2004, 41 (10) : 805 - 810
  • [38] Catchment-scale Richards equation-based modeling of evapotranspiration via boundary condition switching and root water uptake schemes
    Camporese, Matteo
    Daly, Edoardo
    Paniconi, Claudio
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2015, 51 (07) : 5756 - 5771
  • [39] Combining static and portable Cosmic ray neutron sensor data to assess catchment scale heterogeneity in soil water storage and their integrated role in catchment runoff response
    Dimitrova-Petrova, Katya
    Rosolem, Rafael
    Soulsby, Chris
    Wilkinson, Mark E.
    Lilly, Allan
    Geris, Josie
    JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2021, 601
  • [40] Stable isotope tracers as diagnostic tools in upscaling flow path understanding and residence time estimates in a mountainous mesoscale catchment
    Rodgers, P
    Soulsby, C
    Waldron, S
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2005, 19 (11) : 2291 - 2307