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Dependence of rainfall-runoff model performance on calibration conditions under changing climatic conditions. / Jahanshahi, Afshin; Booij, Martijn; Patil, Sopan.
In: Hydrological Sciences Journal, 22.11.2024.

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Dependence of rainfall-runoff model performance on calibration conditions under changing climatic conditions

AU - Jahanshahi, Afshin

AU - Booij, Martijn

AU - Patil, Sopan

PY - 2024/11/22

Y1 - 2024/11/22

N2 - This study investigates the potential differences between spatial and temporal transferability of the Hydrologiska Byråns Vattenbalansavdelning (HBV) rainfall-runoff model parameters in 576 Iranian catchments. Our goal is to determine how parameter transferability is affected by (a) parameter transfer modes (temporal or spatial) and (b) different climate conditions. In the temporal mode, we make decisions in each catchment based on a benchmark baseline that accounts for the seasonality of flows. In the spatial mode, we examine physical similarity and spatial proximity methods. The main conclusions are that: (1) the HBV model struggles to beat the benchmark in lowland catchments; (2) under stationary conditions, rainfall-runoff models have greater temporal transferability than spatial transferability; (3) under non-stationary climate conditions, the number of catchments that perform best in terms of temporal transferability is smaller than in stationary climate conditions; and (4) the rainfall-runoff model has better transferability from drier to wetter conditions

AB - This study investigates the potential differences between spatial and temporal transferability of the Hydrologiska Byråns Vattenbalansavdelning (HBV) rainfall-runoff model parameters in 576 Iranian catchments. Our goal is to determine how parameter transferability is affected by (a) parameter transfer modes (temporal or spatial) and (b) different climate conditions. In the temporal mode, we make decisions in each catchment based on a benchmark baseline that accounts for the seasonality of flows. In the spatial mode, we examine physical similarity and spatial proximity methods. The main conclusions are that: (1) the HBV model struggles to beat the benchmark in lowland catchments; (2) under stationary conditions, rainfall-runoff models have greater temporal transferability than spatial transferability; (3) under non-stationary climate conditions, the number of catchments that perform best in terms of temporal transferability is smaller than in stationary climate conditions; and (4) the rainfall-runoff model has better transferability from drier to wetter conditions

M3 - Article

JO - Hydrological Sciences Journal

JF - Hydrological Sciences Journal

SN - 0262-6667

ER -