Abstract

Abstract. Droughts are serious natural hazards, especially in semi-arid regions. They are also difficult to characterize. Various summary metrics representing the dryness level, denoted drought indices, have been developed to quantify droughts. They typically lump meteorological variables and can thus directly be computed from the outputs of regional climate models in climate-change assessments. While it is generally accepted that drought risks in semi-arid climates will increase in the future, quantifying this increase using climate model outputs is a complex process that depends on the choice and the accuracy of the drought indices, among other factors. In this study, we compare seven meteorological drought indices that are commonly used to predict future droughts. Our goal is to assess the reliability of these indices to predict hydrological impacts of droughts under changing climatic conditions at the annual timescale. We simulate the hydrological responses of a small catchment in northern Spain to droughts in present and future climate, using an integrated hydrological model calibrated for different irrigation scenarios. We compute the correlation of meteorological drought indices with the simulated hydrological time series (discharge, groundwater levels, and water deficit) and compare changes in the relationships between hydrological variables and drought indices. While correlation coefficients linked with a specific drought index are similar for all tested land uses and climates, the relationship between drought indices and hydrological variables often differs between present and future climate. Drought indices based solely on precipitation often underestimate the hydrological impacts of future droughts, while drought indices that additionally include potential evapotranspiration sometimes overestimate the drought effects. In this study, the drought indices with the smallest bias were the rainfall anomaly index, the reconnaissance drought index, and the standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index. However, the efficiency of these drought indices depends on the hydrological variable of interest and the irrigation scenario. We conclude that meteorological drought indices are able to identify years with restricted water availability in present and future climate. However, these indices are not capable of estimating the severity of hydrological impacts of droughts in future climate. A well-calibrated hydrological model is necessary in this respect.

Highlights

  • In semi-arid regions, droughts are a serious natural hazard, often causing tens of millions of Euros of damage (Gil et al, 2011)

  • The correlation coefficients for a particular drought index and a particular hydrological variable are similar for all irrigation scenarios in present and future climate

  • standardized precipitation evapotranspiration index (SPEI), reconnaissance drought index (RDI), and rainfall anomaly index (RAI) have the highest correlation with discharge in the PIRR scenario (0.77 < r < 0.80) as well as in the NOIRR scenario (0.81 < r < 0.83)

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Summary

Introduction

In semi-arid regions, droughts are a serious natural hazard, often causing tens of millions of Euros of damage (Gil et al, 2011). More severe droughts will negatively impact the region, notably the agricultural sector (Stahl et al, 2016). Droughts have a wide range of impacts, and are often difficult to define. They have been classified in four main categories (Mishra and Singh, 2010; Samaniego et al, 2013; Wilhite and Glantz, 1985): Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union.

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