Abstract

Study regionThis study was conducted in Soutloop River Catchment, Northern Cape, South Africa. Study focusAlthough hydrologic models play a critical role in the management of natural resources in arid areas, their application is challenged by the scarcity of data for calibration and validation. Therefore, this study aimed at to configure, calibrate and validate SWAT model in a data-scarce catchment by using the regionalization with physical similarity approach. This approach uses dual calibration and validation procedure, i.e., one in the donor catchment (by using SWAT-CUP (SWAT Calibration and Uncertainty Programs) and the other on the study catchment (by manual calibration and verification). New hydrological insights for the regionBased on the sensitivity analysis, sixteen parameters were calibrated by SWAT-CUP. The result from the uncertainty analysis indicated acceptable values of both the R-factor (0.8****Values are the averages of the calibration and validation procedures.) and P-factor (0.7**). The model performance evaluation also showed acceptable ranges of values (e.g., NS was 0.76** and R2 was 0.78**). However, the main calibration and validation process was conducted outside the target catchment, though it was assumed that the donor and target catchments have similar hydrological responses. Therefore, the study suggested further inspection methods to minimize the model uncertainty in the study catchment. This study enables researchers to exploit the river eco-regional classifications of South Africa to apply hydrologic models to estimate the components of water balance in arid/semi-arid catchments.

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