Abstract

The objective of this paper is to test the ability of a spatially distributed hydrologic model (WetSpa) to simulate soil moisture. The test is conducted in the Baron Fork river basin (Oklahoma, USA), where soil moisture has been recorded on a daily basis at the WEST site soil moisture monitoring station of the Oklahoma Mesonet. The model is calibrated by comparing hourly simulated and observed river flows at Eldon gaging station from October 1, 1995 to December 31, 1996. The model performance to predict hourly river flows is verified by comparing model estimates and observations from January 1, 1997 to December 31, 2000. Next, the model predictions of soil moisture are compared with observations of WEST site soil moisture monitoring station for the same validation period. The observations are well reproduced by the model with errors that are within range of the observation accuracy, although the predictions show somewhat more abrupt temporal fluctuations as the whole root zone is considered to react instantaneously to precipitation events. The good performance compared to other studies is especially attributed to the quality of the rainfall data provided by weather radars. It is concluded that the performance of the model to predict soils moisture is promising, although spatial patterns still have to be verified.

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