EGU2020-19626
https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19626
EGU General Assembly 2020
© Author(s) 2020. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

The Identification of Hydrological Threshold Variables

Arturs Veinbergs1 and Ainis Lagzdins2
Arturs Veinbergs and Ainis Lagzdins
  • 1Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies, Faculty of Environment and Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering and Water Management, Jelgava, Latvia (arturs.veinbergs@llu.lv)
  • 2Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies, Faculty of Environment and Civil Engineering, Environmental Engineering and Water Management, Jelgava, Latvia (arturs.veinbergs@llu.lv)

The threshold groundwater levels limiting the drainage depth and tile drain runoff as well as runoff recession and runoff partitioning are case-specific.  These are the characteristics that are usually necessary for setting up and calibration processes for such models as HYPE (Lindström et al. 2010) and SWAT (Neitsch et al. 2002).  

The objective of the present study is to identify the thresholds of groundwater levels and runoff rates that limit the formations of such runoff components as base flow and tile drain runoff. This study utilizes the data that represents the daily runoff measurements in open ditch with such characteristics as total length 2.4 km, basin area 368 ha, loamy soils, agricultural lands with subsurface drainage systems installed in 98% of the area, average tile depth 1.2m below ground surface.

The runoff components were partly separated from the daily runoff hydrographs through the analysis of storm runoff recession gradients (eq.1) and groundwater level fluctuations during the period from 2006. to 2015. Baseflow and tile drain runoff ware calculated as beeing linearly dependent on daily groundwater level fluctuations (eq.2).

  Rci=Qi+1/Qi,     (1)

Qx=fx(GWT)=ax*GWT+bx ,      (2)

Where: Rci – recession gradient; Qi and Qi+1– runoff of day i and i+1 respectively;  Qx – runoff component; GWT– groundwater level; ax and bx– slope and intercept of a linear function.

Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) and percent bias (PBIAS) were used for comparison of calculated and separated runoff components.

The results indicate a decrease in drainage intensity and reduction in specific yield during the study period. The groundwater level of 1.18m below ground surface limit the existence of the tile drain runoff, that, furthermore,  is similar for rising and falling groundwater level. The results reveal that runoff could be contributed by 35%, 57% and 8% of baseflow, tile drain runoff and surface runoff respectively.

How to cite: Veinbergs, A. and Lagzdins, A.: The Identification of Hydrological Threshold Variables, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-19626, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-19626, 2020