EGU2020-14837
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-14837
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

Wflow_sbm, a spatially distributed hydrologic model: from global data to local applications

Willem van Verseveld1, Hélène Boisgontier1, Laurène Bouaziz1, Dirk Eilander1, Arjen Haag1, Pieter Hazenberg1, Mark Hegnauer1, Ruben Imhoff1,2, Bart van Osnabrugge1,2, Jaap Schellekens3, Frederiek Sperna Weiland1, Corine ten Velden1, Martijn Visser1, Chanoknun Wannasin2, and Albrecht Weerts1,2
Willem van Verseveld et al.
  • 1Deltares, Delft, The Netherlands (willem.vanverseveld@deltares.nl)
  • 2Wageningen University & Research, Wageningen, the Netherlands
  • 3VanderSat, Haarlem, the Netherlands

In this contribution we present the wflow_sbm hydrologic model concept, which is a conceptual bucket-style hydrologic model based on simplified physical relationships including kinematic wave routing for surface and subsurface lateral flow. The model maximizes the use of global data for local applications and allows us to automatically setup a high resolution (~1km2) wflow_sbm model for any basin in the world. For most discharge gauging stations in selected basins from different climate zones, wflow_sbm showed promising results without further calibration. Depending on the geographical area of interest two model parameters, besides anthropogenic interference like reservoir and lake management, show most sensitivity: rooting depth and horizontal saturated hydraulic conductivity.

We extended the parameter estimation of the wflow_sbm hydrological model for the Rhine basin (Imhoff et al, 2019) with point-scale (pedo)transfer-functions (PTFs) in conjunction with scaling operators as applied in Multiscale Parameter Regionalization (MPR) to the global scale at high resolution (~1km2). The state-of-the-art hydro-MERIT dataset at 3 arcsec resolution (Yamazaki et al. (2019)) is scaled to model resolution whilst conserving the drainage network using a newly developed extended Effective Area Method (EAM) for flow direction scaling which builds on the original EAM (Yamazaki et al. 2009). Compared to EAM and the double maximum method, the extended EAM method shows improved skill. The automated model setup derives subgrid information about land slope, river slope and length. River widths are derived from power law relationships between hydro-MERIT river widths and global discharge estimates through multiple linear regression based on GRDC data, precipitation and upstream area with clustering on climate zones. Soil hydraulic parameters are derived from the 250m ISRIC SoilGrids product using PTFs. Furthermore, parameters for interception and rooting depth are derived and upscaled using global or regional land cover maps. Monthly LAI profiles are derived from MODIS (500m) and upscaled. Lake and reservoir parameters are derived from HydroLAKES and GRanD, respectively. The models are run using forcing from globally available data sets like ERA5 and CHIRPS.

 

Imhoff, R., van Verseveld, W., Osnabrugge, B., A. Weerts, Scaling point-scale pedotransfer functions to seamless large-domain parameter estimates for high-resolution distributed hydrological modelling: An example for the Rhine river, submitted to WRR, 2019.

Yamazaki D., D. Ikeshima, J. Sosa, P.D. Bates, G.H. Allen, T.M. Pavelsky, MERIT Hydro: A high-resolution global hydrography map based on latest topography datasets, Water Resources Research, 2019, doi: 10.1029/2019WR024873.

Yamazaki, D., T. Oki., and S. Kanae, Deriving a global river network map and its sub‐grid topographic characteristics from a fine‐resolution flow direction map, Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci., 13, 2241– 2251, 2009.

How to cite: van Verseveld, W., Boisgontier, H., Bouaziz, L., Eilander, D., Haag, A., Hazenberg, P., Hegnauer, M., Imhoff, R., van Osnabrugge, B., Schellekens, J., Sperna Weiland, F., ten Velden, C., Visser, M., Wannasin, C., and Weerts, A.: Wflow_sbm, a spatially distributed hydrologic model: from global data to local applications, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-14837, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-14837, 2020.

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