TY - JOUR
T1 - Process-based calibration of WRF-Hydro in a mountainous basin in southwestern U.S.
AU - Mascaro, Giuseppe
AU - Hussein, Abdinur
AU - Dugger, Aubrey
AU - Gochis, David J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank two anonymous reviewers and the Editor, Dr. Sun, for their comments that help to improve the quality of the manuscript. This research was supported by the Salt River Project (SRP) through the award “JRP (SRP): Calibration of WRF‐Hydro in the Salt and Verde Rivers for Future Implementation in the National Water Model.” The authors also thank James Walters from SRP for providing data and suggestions on the basin hydrologic processes. The authors acknowledge Research Computing at Arizona State University for providing High‐Performance Computing resources that have contributed to the research results reported in this paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Water Resources Association.
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The National Water Model (NWM) will provide the next generation of operational streamflow forecasts across the United States (U.S.) using the WRF-Hydro hydrologic model. In this study, we propose a strategy to calibrate 10 parameters of WRF-Hydro that control runoff generation during floods and snowmelt seasons, and due to baseflow. We focus on the Oak Creek Basin (820 km2), an unregulated mountainous sub-watershed of the Salt and Verde River Basins in Arizona, which are the largest source of water supply for the Phoenix Metropolitan area. We calibrate the model against discharge observations at the outlet in 2008–2011, and validate it at two stream gauging stations in 2012–2016. After bias correcting the precipitation forcings, we sequentially modify the model parameters controlling distinct runoff generation processes in the basin. We find that capturing the deep drainage to the aquifer is crucial to improve the simulation of all processes and that this flux is mainly controlled by the SLOPE parameter. Performance metrics indicate that snowmelt, baseflow, and floods due to winter storms are simulated fairly well, while flood peaks caused by summer thunderstorms are severely underestimated. We suggest the use of spatially variable soil depth to enhance the simulation of these processes. This work supports the ongoing calibration effort of the NWM by testing WRF-Hydro in a watershed with a large variety of runoff mechanisms that are representative of several basins in the southwestern U.S.
AB - The National Water Model (NWM) will provide the next generation of operational streamflow forecasts across the United States (U.S.) using the WRF-Hydro hydrologic model. In this study, we propose a strategy to calibrate 10 parameters of WRF-Hydro that control runoff generation during floods and snowmelt seasons, and due to baseflow. We focus on the Oak Creek Basin (820 km2), an unregulated mountainous sub-watershed of the Salt and Verde River Basins in Arizona, which are the largest source of water supply for the Phoenix Metropolitan area. We calibrate the model against discharge observations at the outlet in 2008–2011, and validate it at two stream gauging stations in 2012–2016. After bias correcting the precipitation forcings, we sequentially modify the model parameters controlling distinct runoff generation processes in the basin. We find that capturing the deep drainage to the aquifer is crucial to improve the simulation of all processes and that this flux is mainly controlled by the SLOPE parameter. Performance metrics indicate that snowmelt, baseflow, and floods due to winter storms are simulated fairly well, while flood peaks caused by summer thunderstorms are severely underestimated. We suggest the use of spatially variable soil depth to enhance the simulation of these processes. This work supports the ongoing calibration effort of the NWM by testing WRF-Hydro in a watershed with a large variety of runoff mechanisms that are representative of several basins in the southwestern U.S.
KW - hydrologic modeling
KW - mountainous basin
KW - National Water Model
KW - process-based calibration
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U2 - 10.1111/1752-1688.13076
DO - 10.1111/1752-1688.13076
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85141342297
JO - Journal of the American Water Resources Association
JF - Journal of the American Water Resources Association
SN - 1093-474X
ER -