Abstract

Abstract. The baseflow is the drainage from the groundwater and soil water to the streamflow. As one important source of the streamflow, the baseflow could be the main source of the streamflow in the dry season. The Wei River, located in the semi-arid region of the Loess Plateau which is overlain by deep and loose soil, is the largest tributary of the Yellow River. According to former research, most of the streamflow in the dry season in the headwater of the Yellow River is baseflow. For the whole Yellow River basin, the baseflow is an important component of the streamflow, and accounts for about 44% of the annual runoff. Physically-based distributed hydrological models can simulate the runoff components separately, and are important tools to analyse the runoff components. Given the importance of the baseflow in the dry season for drought relief to support the ecological water requirement and irrigation, especially in the Wei River, the baseflow is analysed in this study. To investigate the baseflow in the Upper Wei River basin, a semi-distributed hydrological model based on a Representative Elementary Watershed approach (THREW) is employed to investigate the runoff generation process. To compare the results, an automatic baseflow separation method proposed by Arnold is used to separate the baseflow from the daily streamflow at Beidao hydrological station in Upper Wei River basin from 2001 to 2004. Based on the hydrological modelling and the Arnold separation method, the average annual baseflow index, i.e. the ratio of baseflow to the total runoff, is estimated as in the range of 0.30–0.36. The average intra-annual monthly baseflow index represents the seasonality of the baseflow due to the seasonality of the precipitation and evapotranspiration, and is also analysed.

Highlights

  • Baseflow is considered to be the groundwater contribution to streamflow (Arnold et al, 1995) and is one important component of the runoff in a river, especially in arid and semi-arid regions

  • As the continuous hydrological model for the semi-arid region, Tsinghua Hydrological Model based on REW (THREW) has a reasonable performance in modelling the rainfall−runoff process in the Upper Wei River basin

  • In the THREW model, fast subsurface flow can quickly respond to the change of the water storage in the upper soil layer due to rainfall infiltration, and more or less represents the interflow in the upper layer soil near the river channel (Liu et al, 2012)

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Summary

Introduction

Baseflow is considered to be the groundwater contribution to streamflow (Arnold et al, 1995) and is one important component of the runoff in a river, especially in arid and semi-arid regions. Given the importance of the baseflow in the dry season for drought relief to support the ecological water requirement and irrigation, especially in the Wei River, the baseflow is analysed using a distributed physically-based hydrological model and baseflow separation method. The Tsinghua Hydrological Model based on REW (THREW) is used to simulate the baseflow in the Upper Wei River basin.

Results
Conclusion
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