Impact of Watershed Subdivision and Soil Data Resolution on SWAT Model Calibration and Parameter Uncertainty1

被引:71
作者
Kumar, Sanjiv [1 ]
Merwade, Venkatesh [1 ]
机构
[1] Purdue Univ, Sch Civil Engn, W Lafayette, IN 47907 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION | 2009年 / 45卷 / 05期
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
hydrologic modeling; watershed subdivision; parameter uncertainty; Soil Water Assessment Tool; autocalibration; AUTOMATIC CALIBRATION; SENSITIVITY-ANALYSIS; GLOBAL OPTIMIZATION; STREAM-FLOW; RUNOFF; SEDIMENT; QUALITY; SIMULATION; OUTPUT; AUTOCALIBRATION;
D O I
10.1111/j.1752-1688.2009.00353.x
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Impact of watershed subdivision and soil data resolution on Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model calibration and parameter uncertainty is investigated by creating 24 different watershed model configurations for two study areas in northern Indiana. SWAT autocalibration tool is used to calibrate 14 parameters for simulating seven years of daily streamflow records. Calibrated parameter sets are found to be different for all 24 watershed configurations, however in terms of calibrated model output, their effect is minimal. In some cases, autocalibration is followed by manual calibration to correct for low flows, which were underestimated during autocalibration. In addition to normal validation using four years of streamflow data for each calibrated parameter set, cross-validation (using a calibrated parameter set from one model configuration to validate observations using another configuration) is performed to investigate the effect of different model configurations on streamflow prediction. Results show that streamflow output during cross-validation is not affected, thus highlighting the non-unique nature of calibrated parameters in hydrologic modeling. Finally, parameter uncertainty is investigated by extracting good parameter sets during the autocalibration process. Parameter uncertainty analysis suggests that significant parameters show very narrow range of uncertainty across different watershed configurations compared with nonsignificant parameters. Results from recalibration of some configurations using only six significant parameters were comparable to that from calibration using 14 parameters, suggesting that including fewer significant parameters could reduce the uncertainty arising from model parameters, and also expedite the calibration process.
引用
收藏
页码:1179 / 1196
页数:18
相关论文
共 57 条
[1]   A PENMAN FOR ALL SEASONS [J].
ALLEN, RG .
JOURNAL OF IRRIGATION AND DRAINAGE ENGINEERING, 1986, 112 (04) :348-368
[2]   OPERATIONAL ESTIMATES OF REFERENCE EVAPOTRANSPIRATION [J].
ALLEN, RG ;
JENSEN, ME ;
WRIGHT, JL ;
BURMAN, RD .
AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 1989, 81 (04) :650-662
[3]   Role of watershed subdivision on modeling the effectiveness of best management practices with SWAT [J].
Arabi, M ;
Govindaraju, RS ;
Hantush, MM ;
Engel, BA .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 2006, 42 (02) :513-528
[4]  
ARCSWAT, 2007, ASSESSMENT, V2007, P1
[5]   Large area hydrologic modeling and assessment - Part 1: Model development [J].
Arnold, JG ;
Srinivasan, R ;
Muttiah, RS ;
Williams, JR .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 1998, 34 (01) :73-89
[6]   PROPHECY, REALITY AND UNCERTAINTY IN DISTRIBUTED HYDROLOGICAL MODELING [J].
BEVEN, K .
ADVANCES IN WATER RESOURCES, 1993, 16 (01) :41-51
[7]   THE FUTURE OF DISTRIBUTED MODELS - MODEL CALIBRATION AND UNCERTAINTY PREDICTION [J].
BEVEN, K ;
BINLEY, A .
HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 1992, 6 (03) :279-298
[8]  
Bingner RL, 1997, T ASAE, V40, P1329, DOI 10.13031/2013.21391
[9]   Impact of DEM mesh size and soil map scale on SWAT runoff, sediment, and NO3-N loads predictions [J].
Chaplot, V .
JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY, 2005, 312 (1-4) :207-222
[10]   Effect of DEM data resolution on SWAT output uncertainty [J].
Chaubey, I ;
Cotter, AS ;
Costello, TA ;
Soerens, TS .
HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2005, 19 (03) :621-628