Assessment of Variable Source Area Hydrological Models in the Upper Cauvery Basin, Karnataka, India
Date
2016
Authors
B. C, Kumar Raju
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
With increased availability of spatial data-sets of catchment characteristics and
hydrometeorological variables, distributed hydrological models are being applied to
solve a variety of problems related to catchment hydrology and water resources
management. However, experimental results obtained in recent decades have shown
the possiblity of existence of runoff generation mechanisms other than the
conventional infiltration-excess (Hortonian) mechanism. In particular, it has been
shown that Variable Source Area (VSA) mechanism of runoff generation may prevail
in humid steeply sloping and well vegetated watersheds. Accordingly, efforts have
been made by previous researchers to incorporate this mechanism into distributed
hydrological models and their performances have been evaluated in mostly humid
temperate regions and not so much in humid tropical regions.
The primary objective of the present study was to compare the performances of
hydrological models which incorporate the Variable Source Area (VSA) mechanism
of runoff generation with that of the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) which
employs the conventional infiltration-excess mechanism of runoff generation. One of
the VSA based model used, SWAT-VSA, has been proposed by earlier researchers as
a re-conceptualization of the SWAT model and uses a topography-based wetness
index to identify source areas and simulates runoff in a manner consistent with VSA
hydrology. In the present study, the topography-based wetness index was replaced
with a Modified Normalized Difference Water Index (MNDWI) derived from satellite
imagery resulting in a new VSA model version, SWAT-MNDWI. Performance
evaluation of the models was carried out through their application in two humid
tropical watersheds (Hemavathi – 2974 km2; Harangi – 538.8 km2) located in the
Upper Cauvery River Basin (36,682 km2), India wherein previous studies have shown
the existence of VSA hydrology.
The other aspects addressed in this study include: assessment of significance and
magnitude of trends in historical records of observed hydrometeorological variables in
the Upper Cauvery Basin, evaluation of uncertainties associated with streamflowii
predictions of the 3 hydrological models and simulation of the hydrologic impacts of
hypothetical land use/land cover (LU/LC) changes in the Hemavathi and Harangi
watersheds.
The present study examined the significance and magnitude of trends in the monthly
rainfall (33 rain gauges), maximum and minimum temperature (6 climate stations)
and streamflow at 4 gauge sites in the Upper Cauvery Basin for the historical 30 year
period 1981-2010. The statistical parameters - Coefficient of Variation (CV) and
percentage departure were calculated for average monthly values separately for 3
decades. The Seasonal-Kendall and Sen’s slope estimator were used to calculate
significance and magnitude of trends in rainfall, temperature and streamflow data.
Detrended Fluctuation Analysis (DFA) method was used to detect long-term
persistence in the time series data. As expected, the CV of rainfall shows a large
variation in the month December to March, while the percentage departure also varies
during these months for different decades. But there was no significant trend found
for all rain gauge stations and sub basins except for the Arkavathi sub basin. For
maximum temperature there was not much variation except in the months of May and
June at the Hassan climate station. Statistically significant trend was observed in
maximum temperature for Chikmagalur and Hassan stations. The CV of minimum
temperature shows a large variability from November to March for all climate stations
and also a significant increasing trend for Hassan and Bangalore stations, while for
Madikeri a decreasing trend was observed with a variation of -0.16 0C/year. There
was not much variation found for streamflow except in K M Vadi gauge site and
T.Narasipur gauge site which showed a significant decreasing trend of -0.778 m3/s/
year. Long range dependence analysis revealed a weak persistence for both rainfall
and streamflow of the basin.
Using relevant data inputs pertaining to rainfall, climate, elevation, Land use/Land
Cover (LU/LC) and soils, the SWAT, SWAT-VSA and SWAT-MNDWI models were
applied separately to both watersheds using a daily time step. Models were calibrated
for the historical period 2000-2003 and validated for the period 2004-2006 using
observed daily streamflow records at the watershed outlets. The comparative
assessment focused specifically on the following aspects for the six cases considerediii
(3 models applied to 2 watersheds): 1) sensitivity of model parameters 2) accuracy of
daily streamflow predictions at the watershed outlets 3) predictions of spatially and
temporally averaged annual water balance components 4) differences in spatial
patterns of source areas of surface runoff. Sensitivity analysis indicated that for the
SWAT model, Curve Number (CN) was the most important parameter while for the
VSA based models, parameters related to the unsaturated zone and shallow
groundwater were important, a result consistent with the runoff mechanism
incorporated in the models. The accuracies of streamflow prediction as determined
from scatter plots and model performance statistics were more or less similar both in
calibration and validation for all the three models with the models performing better
in the forested Harangi watershed. Overall, the SWAT-MNDWI model proved to be
the best one in simulating daily streamflow with Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (ENS) of
0.85, coefficient of determination (R2) of 0.88, percentage bias (PBIAS) of 13.2% and
root mean square error (RMSE) of 37.48 m3/s for the Hemavathi watershed and
corresponding values of 0.88, 0.88, 1.09% and 16.67 m3/s for the Harangi watershed.
All three models simulated spatially and temporally averaged major water balance
components in a consistent manner resulting in a residual error of <5% of annual
rainfall in the annual water balance. However, evapotranspiration loss as a percentage
of rainfall appeared unreasonable (27% - 32%) for the wet Harangi watershed
probably on account of it being predominantly forested. The spatial patterns of
surface runoff generation were somewhat similar for the SWAT-VSA and SWATMNDWI models, but completely different for the SWAT model, again a result
consistent with the runoff generation mechanism adopted. Overall results of this study
have demonstrated that models incorporating VSA hydrology, and in particular the
SWAT-MNDWI model proposed in this study, provide accurate and convenient tools
for distributed hydrologic modelling in humid tropical watersheds.
This study also focuses on assessing uncertainties associated with SWAT-MNDWI,
SWAT-VSA and SWAT models using SWAT-CUP (Calibration and Uncertainty
Programs) tool. Two multi-objective uncertainty techniques (Generalized Likelihood
Uncertainty Equation (GLUE) and Sequential Uncertainty Fitting algorithm (SUFI-2))
were tested for the Hemavathi and Harangi watersheds. The goodness-of-fit and
efficiency of the models have been tested using ENS as the objective function. GLUEiv
and SUFI-2 techniques yielded good results in minimizing the differences between
observed and simulated streamflows at the outlets of the Hemavathi and Harangi
watersheds. The results show that GLUE performance was slightly better than the
SUFI-2 technique for all models for both the watersheds during calibration and
validation periods. The 95PPU estimated by the GLUE and SUFI-2 techniques are
very close to each other and larger than 45% (P-factor) for all models for both the
watersheds during calibration and validation periods. For GLUE, R-factor values
during the validation phase for the Hemavathi watershed were 0.35, 0.38 and 0.34 for
the SWAT-MNDWI, SWAT-VSA and SWAT models respectively with
corresponding values for the Harangi watershed being 0.41, 0.39 and 0.40. It should
be noted that that both GLUE and SUFI-2 cannot accurately quantify the prediction
uncertainty of SWAT-MNDWI, SWAT-VSA and SWAT models. Overall results
indicated that the GLUE technique applied on the SWAT-MNDWI model performed
best in quantifying the prediction uncertainty of streamflow at the outlets of both
watersheds.
In order to simulate the hydrologic impacts of LU/LC changes in the study area, two
hypothetical LU/LC change scenarios were formulated for Hemavathi and Harangi
watersheds. The SWAT-MNDWI, SWAT-VSA and SWAT models were used to
simulate the hydrologic responses under these scenarios. Values of average annual
water balance components and their percentage change with respect to reference
results were calculated for both watersheds using the three models. Additionally, an
effort was also made to construct the Flow Duration Curves (FDCs) using daily
streamflow values generated under each scenario. Differences in optimal parameters
of an empirical model for the FDC, magnitudes of flow quantiles, high flow index and
low flow index were computed for each scenario. For the Hemavathi watershed, with
increase in agricultural land there is increase in water yield predicted by all three
models. With increase in forest cover there is decrease in water yield predicted by
SWAT-VSA and SWAT models while for SWAT-MNDWI an increase in water yield
was found. For Harangi watershed, with increase in agricultural land or forested area
there is decrease in water yield for all three models except SWAT-VSA model in
scenario I. Both the scenarios appeared to have significant impacts on the runoffv
regime as indicated by significant changes in FDC model parameters, flow quantiles
and flow indices.
Overall results of this study provide useful inputs with regard the magnitude and
direction of likely future changes in important hydrometeorological variables which
can be used to prepare plans for mitigation and adaptation to climate change in the
Upper Cauvery Basin.
The present study has demonstrated an overall methodology for application,
performance evaluation and uncertainty analysis of distributed hydrological models
using a variety of ground-based inputs and satellite data within a GIS framework.
Since previous studies in similar watersheds in the Western Ghats region have
identified VSA as a dominant mechanism of runoff generation, the spatial patterns
obtained with the SWAT-VSA and SWAT-MNDWI models provide information
which will prove to be extremely useful in soil and water conservation measures and
in identifying source areas of non-point pollution.
The SWAT-MNDWI model proposed in this study is particularly attractive since it
employs satellite imagery to accurately identify areas of different wetnesses within
the watershed and integrates this information into a distributed hydrological model.
As the results of this study have demonstrated, such a modelling approach using VSA
hydrology provides an accurate and convenient tool for distributed hydrologic
modelling and impact assessment of LU/LC changes in humid tropical watersheds.
Description
Keywords
Department of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, Hydrological Modeling, SWAT, wetness index, Variable Source Area, Surface Water Hydrology, Remote Sensing, GIS, Hydrometeorological Analysis, Uncertainty Analysis, LU/LC changes, Hydrological impacts, Upper Cauvery Basin