Abstract

Frozen ground and precipitation seasonality may strongly affect hydrological processes in a cold alpine basin, but the calibration of a hydrological model rarely considers their impacts on model parameters, likely leading to considerable simulation biases. In this study, we conducted a case study in a typical alpine catchment, the Babao River basin, in Northwest China, using the distributed hydrology–soil–vegetation model (DHSVM), to investigate the impacts of frozen ground type and precipitation seasonality on model parameters. The sensitivity analysis identified seven sensitive parameters in the DHSVM, amid which soil model parameters are found sensitive to the frozen ground type and land cover/vegetation parameters sensitive to dry and wet seasons. A stratified calibration approach that considers the impacts on model parameters of frozen soil types and seasons was then proposed and implemented by the particle swarm optimization method. The results show that the proposed calibration approach can obviously improve simulation accuracy in modeling streamflow in the study basin. The seasonally stratified calibration has an advantage in controlling evapotranspiration and surface flow in rainy periods, while the spatially stratified calibration considering frozen soil type enhances the simulation of base flow. In a typical cold alpine area without sufficient measured parametric values, this approach can outperform conventional calibration approaches in providing more robust parameter values. The underestimation in the April streamflow also highlights the importance of improved physics in a hydrological model, without which the model calibration cannot fully compensate the gap.

Highlights

  • Hydrological models are simplified, conceptual representations of the real world water cycle [1], aiming to analyze, understand and explore the dynamics of hydrological processes

  • We identified sensitive inathe as frozen ground type sensitive and season sensitive parameters when parameters simulating in cold alpine basin

  • This study proposes a spatially and temporally stratified calibration approach for hydrological modelling in cold alpine basins

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Summary

Introduction

Hydrological models are simplified, conceptual representations of the real world water cycle [1], aiming to analyze, understand and explore the dynamics of hydrological processes. A model consists of various parameters that define the characteristics of the model. Based on the model parameters, hydrological models are classified into lumped and distributed models. While the former category uses lumped parameters for an entire basin and is usually difficult to realistically represent spatiotemporal heterogeneity within a catchment, the latter, generally physically based, takes into. Water 2019, 11, 985 account inhomogeneous information fed with spatially discretized units such as the hydrological response unit (HRU) or grid cell [2]. The distributed models usually require a large number of parameters. Some of the model parameters are measurable but many of them are hard to obtain in a direct manner [3]. Parameter calibration techniques have been developed to estimate more suitable parametric values

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