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Hydrological regionalisation based on available hydrological information for runoff prediction at catchment scale
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Abstract. Regionalisation provides a way of transferring hydrological
information from gauged to ungauged catchments. The past few decades has
seen several kinds of regionalisation approaches for catchment
classification and runoff predictions. The underlying assumption is that
catchments having similar catchment properties are hydrological similar.
This requires the appropriate selection of catchment properties,
particularly the inclusion of observed hydrological information, to explain
the similarity of hydrological behaviour. We selected observable catchments
properties and flow duration curves to reflect the hydrological behaviour,
and to regionalize rainfall-runoff response for runoff prediction. As a case
study, we investigated 15 catchments located in the Yangtze and Yellow River
under multiple hydro-climatic conditions. A clustering scheme was developed
to separate the catchments into 4 homogeneous regions by employing catchment
properties including hydro-climatic attributes, topographic attributes and
land cover etc. We utilized daily flow duration curves as the indicator of
hydrological response and interpreted hydrological similarity by root mean
square errors. The combined analysis of similarity in catchment properties
and hydrological response suggested that catchments in the same homogenous
region were hydrological similar. A further validation was conducted by
establishing a rainfall-runoff coaxial correlation diagram for each
catchment. A common coaxial correlation diagram was generated for each
homogenous region. The performances of most coaxial correlation diagrams met
the national standard. The coaxial correlation diagram can be transferred
within the homogeneous region for runoff prediction in ungauged catchments
at an hourly time scale.
Title: Hydrological regionalisation based on available hydrological information for runoff prediction at catchment scale
Description:
Abstract.
Regionalisation provides a way of transferring hydrological
information from gauged to ungauged catchments.
The past few decades has
seen several kinds of regionalisation approaches for catchment
classification and runoff predictions.
The underlying assumption is that
catchments having similar catchment properties are hydrological similar.
This requires the appropriate selection of catchment properties,
particularly the inclusion of observed hydrological information, to explain
the similarity of hydrological behaviour.
We selected observable catchments
properties and flow duration curves to reflect the hydrological behaviour,
and to regionalize rainfall-runoff response for runoff prediction.
As a case
study, we investigated 15 catchments located in the Yangtze and Yellow River
under multiple hydro-climatic conditions.
A clustering scheme was developed
to separate the catchments into 4 homogeneous regions by employing catchment
properties including hydro-climatic attributes, topographic attributes and
land cover etc.
We utilized daily flow duration curves as the indicator of
hydrological response and interpreted hydrological similarity by root mean
square errors.
The combined analysis of similarity in catchment properties
and hydrological response suggested that catchments in the same homogenous
region were hydrological similar.
A further validation was conducted by
establishing a rainfall-runoff coaxial correlation diagram for each
catchment.
A common coaxial correlation diagram was generated for each
homogenous region.
The performances of most coaxial correlation diagrams met
the national standard.
The coaxial correlation diagram can be transferred
within the homogeneous region for runoff prediction in ungauged catchments
at an hourly time scale.
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