Abstract

Precipitation obtained from rain gauges is an essential input for hydrological modelling. It is often sparse in highly topographically varying terrain, exhibiting a certain amount of uncertainty in hydrological modelling. Hence, satellite rainfall estimates have been used as an alternative or as a supplement to station observations. In this study, an attempt was made to evaluate the Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) and Climate Hazards Group InfraRed Precipitation with Station data (CHIRPS), employing a semi-distributed hydrological model, i.e., Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT), for simulating streamflow and validating them against the flows generated by the India Meteorological Department (IMD) rainfall dataset in the Gurupura river catchment of India. Distinct testing scenarios for simulating streamflow were made to check the suitability of these satellite precipitation data. The TRMM was able to better estimate rainfall than CHIRPS after performing categorical and continuous statistical results with respect to IMD rainfall data. While comparing the performance of model simulations, the IMD rainfall-driven streamflow emerged as the best followed by the TRMM, CHIRPS-0.05, and CHIRPS-0.25. The coefficient of determination (R2), Nash–Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE), and percent bias (PBIAS) were in the range 0.63 to 0.86, 0.62 to 0.86, and −14.98 to 0.87, respectively. Further, an attempt was made to examine the spatial distribution of key hydrological signature, i.e., flow duration curve (FDC) in the 30–95 percentile range of non-exceedance probability. It was observed that TRMM underestimated the flow for agricultural water availability corresponding to 30 percent, even though it showed a good performance compared to the other satellite rainfall-driven model outputs.

Highlights

  • Precipitation is a critical element of the hydrological cycle which is responsible for replenishing freshwater on the planet

  • Spatial Distribution of Rainfall Data observed that CHIRPS-0.25 and CHIRPS-0.05 precipitation products detect a higher amount of 3 represents the isohyetal

  • India Meteorological Department (IMD), Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM), and CHIRPS-0.05 and time rainfall during the monsoon season maps whenfor compared with CHIRPS-0.25, TRMM precipitation data

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Summary

Introduction

Precipitation is a critical element of the hydrological cycle which is responsible for replenishing freshwater on the planet It is an essential input for hydrological modelling and forms the basis of hydrological, agricultural research applications, environment studies, and climate change studies [1,2]. Many satellite rainfall estimates were made available free of cost from different sources with high temporal and spatial resolutions providing global coverage at sub-daily, daily, and monthly time steps [11]. Signal calibration and corrections for beam filling, bright band, and attenuation could be considered as their limitations [15,16] These satellite data could be validated either by comparing them to station data and ground-based radar estimates or by confirming their predictive ability and effectiveness through a hydrological modelling framework [17]

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