2025 : 9 : 29

Mohsen Tavakoli

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
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Faculty: Agriculture
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Research

Title
Intercomparison of hydrological model structures and calibration approaches in climate scenario impact projections
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Climate change,Ensemble modelling,Extreme flows,Rainfall–runoff model,Predictive uncertainty
Year
2014
Journal JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
DOI
Researchers Thomas Vansteenkiste ، Mohsen Tavakoli ، Victor Ntegeka ، Florimond De Smedt ، Okke Batelaan ، Fernando Pereira ، Patrick Willems

Abstract

The objective of this paper is to investigate the effects of hydrological model structure and calibration on climate change impact results in hydrology. The uncertainty in the hydrological impact results is assessed by the relative change in runoff volumes and peak and low flow extremes from historical and future climate conditions. The effect of the hydrological model structure is examined through the use of five hydrological models with different spatial resolutions and process descriptions. These were applied to a medium sized catchment in Belgium. The models vary from the lumped conceptual NAM, PDM and VHM models over the intermediate detailed and distributed WetSpa model to the fully distributed MIKE SHE model. The latter model accounts for the 3D groundwater processes and interacts bi-directionally with a full hydrodynamic MIKE 11 river model. After careful and manual calibration of these models, accounting for the accuracy of the peak and low flow extremes and runoff subflows, and the changes in these extremes for changing rainfall conditions, the five models respond in a similar way to the climate scenarios over Belgium. Future projections on peak flows are highly uncertain with expected increases as well as decreases depending on the climate scenario. The projections on future low flows are more uniform; low flows decrease (up to 60%) for all models and for all climate scenarios. However, the uncertainties in the impact projections are high, mainly in the dry season. With respect to the model structural uncertainty, the PDM model simulates significantly higher runoff peak flows under future wet scenarios, which is explained by its specific model structure. For the low flow extremes, the MIKE SHE model projects significantly lower low flows in dry scenario conditions in comparison to the other models, probably due to its large difference in process descriptions for the groundwater component, the groundwater–river interactions. The effect of the model calibra