Abstract

To predict the variability of dam water levels, parametric Multivariate Linear Regression (MLR), stochastic Vector AutoRegressive (VAR), Random Forest Regression (RFR) and Multilayer Perceptron (MLP) Artificial Neural Network (ANN) models were compared based on the influences of climate factors (rainfall and temperature), climate indices (DSLP, Aridity Index (AI), SOI and Niño 3.4) and land-use land-cover (LULC) as the predictor variables. For the case study of the Gaborone dam and the Bokaa dam in the semi-arid Botswana, from 2001 to 2019, the prediction results showed that the linear MLR is not robust for predicting the complex non-linear variabilities of the dam water levels with the predictor variables. The stochastic VAR detected the relationship between LULC and the dam water levels with R2 > 0.95; however, it was unable to sufficiently capture the influence of climate factors on the dam water levels. RFR and MLP-ANN showed significant correlations between the dam water levels and the climate factors and climate indices, with a higher R2 value between 0.890 and 0.926, for the Gaborone dam, compared to 0.704–0.865 for the Bokaa dam. Using LULC for dam water predictions, RFR performed better than MLP-ANN, with higher accuracy results for the Bokaa dam. Based on the climate factors and climate indices, MLP-ANN provided the best prediction results for the dam water levels for both dams. To improve the prediction results, a VAR-ANN hybrid model was found to be more suitable for integrating LULC and the climate conditions and in predicting the variability of the linear and non-linear time-series components of the dam water levels for both dams.

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