Abstract

The Meghna River basin is a transboundary basin that lies in Bangladesh (~40%) and India (~60%). Due to its terrain structure, the Bangladesh portion of the basin experiences frequent floods that cause severe human and economic losses. Bangladesh, as the downstream nation in the basin, faces challenges in receiving hydro-meteorological and water use data from India for effective water resource management. To address such issue, satellite rainfall products are recognized as an alternative. However, they are affected by biases and, thus, must be calibrated and verified using ground observations. This research compares the performance of four widely available gauge-adjusted satellite rainfall products (GSRPs) against ground rainfall observations in the Meghna basin within Bangladesh. Further biases in the GSRPs are then identified. The GSRPs have both similarities and differences in terms of producing biases. To maximize the usage of the GSRPs and to further improve their accuracy, several bias correction and merging techniques are applied to correct them. Correction factors and merging weights are calculated at the local gauge stations and are spatially distributed by adopting an interpolation method to improve the GSRPs, both inside and outside Bangladesh. Of the four bias correction methods, modified linear correction (MLC) has performed better, and partially removed the GSRPs’ systematic biases. In addition, of the three merging techniques, inverse error-variance weighting (IEVW) has provided better results than the individual GSRPs and removed significantly more biases than the MLC correction method for three of the five validation stations, whereas the two other stations that experienced heavy rainfall events, showed better results for the MLC method. Hence, the combined use of IEVW merging and MLC correction is explored. The combined method has provided the best results, thus creating an improved dataset. The applicability of this dataset is then investigated using a hydrological model to simulated streamflows at two critical locations. The results show that the dataset reproduces the hydrological responses of the basin well, as compared with the observed streamflows. Together, these results indicate that the improved dataset can overcome the limitations of poor data availability in the basin and can serve as a reference rainfall dataset for wide range of applications (e.g., flood modelling and forecasting, irrigation planning, damage and risk assessment, and climate change adaptation planning). In addition, the proposed methodology of creating a reference rainfall dataset based on the GSRPs could also be applicable to other poorly-gauged and inaccessible transboundary river basins, thus providing reliable rainfall information and effective water resource management for sustainable development.

Highlights

  • Bangladesh is among the most flood-prone countries in the world, as it is located at the confluence of three of the world’s major alluvial rivers, the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna (GBM) [1]

  • To carry out the performance evaluation of the gauge-adjusted satellite rainfall products (GSRPs) and to investigate their potential for use as a reference rainfall dataset in the Meghna basin, this study compares each of the GSRPs with the ground rainfall measurements at the gauge locations on a point-to pixel basis

  • Four GSRPs (CHIRPS, Global Satellite Mapping of Precipitation (GSMaP)-G, TMPA-G, and Multi-Source Weighted-Ensemble Precipitation (MSWEP)), all of which are freely available at near-present (1–3 week latency), are evaluated to create a reference rainfall dataset in the near-present time scale for various hydrological applications in the basin

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Summary

Introduction

Bangladesh is among the most flood-prone countries in the world, as it is located at the confluence of three of the world’s major alluvial rivers, the Ganges, Brahmaputra, and Meghna (GBM) [1]. The Meghna basin experiences heavy damage due to its complex terrain structure, abundant precipitation originating from the world’s wettest places (which are within the catchment), and the prolonged duration of flooding due to flow obstructions (either from the combined flow of the Ganges and the Brahmaputra, or from the back-water effect caused by tidal influence) [3,4,5,6] This damage mainly involves loss of life and economic losses because the Bangladesh portion of the basin is home to agriculture and aquaculture activities that support the country’s economy and population. Water resource management in the basin (e.g., prevention and management of floods and droughts, agricultural management, and water-quality control) is among the nation’s top priorities for ensuring food security

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