Abstract

Abstract. The water balances of twenty catchments in the Upper Blue Nile basin have been analyzed using a top-down modeling approach based on Budyko's hypotheses. The objective of this study is to obtain better understanding of water balance dynamics of upper Blue Nile catchments on annual and monthly time scales and on a spatial scale of meso scale to large scale. The water balance analysis using a Budyko-type curve at annual scale reveals that the aridity index does not exert a first order control in most of the catchments. This implies the need to increase model complexity to monthly time scale to include the effects of seasonal soil moisture dynamics. The dynamic water balance model used in this study predicts the direct runoff and other processes based on the limit concept; i.e. for dry environments since rainfall amount is small, the aridity index approaches to infinity or equivalently evaporation approaches rainfall and for wet environments where the rainfall amount is large, the aridity index approaches to zero and actual evaporation approaches the potential evaporation. The uncertainty of model parameters has been assessed using the GLUE (Generalized Likelihood Uncertainty Estimation) methodology. The results show that the majority of the parameters are reasonably well identifiable. However, the baseflow recession constant was poorly identifiable. Parameter uncertainty and model structural errors could be the reason for the poorly identifiable parameter. Moreover, a multi-objective model calibration strategy has been employed to emphasize the different aspects of the hydrographs on low and high flows. The model has been calibrated and validated against observed streamflow time series and it shows good performance for the twenty study catchments in the upper Blue Nile. During the calibration period (1995–2000) the Nash and Sutcliffe efficiency (E NS) for monthly flow prediction varied between 0.52 to 0.93 (dominated by high flows), while it varied between 0.32 to 0.90 using logarithms of flow series (indicating the goodness of low flow simulations). The model is parsimonious and it is suggested that the calibrated parameters could be used after some more regionalization efforts to predict monthly stream flows in ungauged catchments of the Upper Blue Nile basin, which is the vast majority of catchments in that region.

Highlights

  • The Blue Nile river emanates from Lake Tana in Ethiopia at an elevation of 1780 m a.s.l

  • The annual water balance has been computed for the twenty catchments of the Upper Blue Nile basin with the assumption that evaporation can be estimated from water availability and atmospheric demand

  • The poor accuracy of the prediction is related to the effect of neglecting soil water storage and other error sources could influence the results as well, e.g. the uncertainty of catchment rainfall and the estimation of potential evaporation, seasonality of rainfall, and Performance measure efficiency were used in (ENS) [−] root mean squared error (RMSE)

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Summary

Introduction

The Blue Nile river emanates from Lake Tana in Ethiopia at an elevation of 1780 m a.s.l. Johnson and Curtis, 1994; Conway, 1997; Mishra and Hata, 2006; Steenhuis et al, 2009). The hydrology of the Upper Blue Nile basin was studied using a simple water balance model S. Tekleab et al.: Water balance modeling of Upper Blue Nile catchments using a top-down approach

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