Predicting event response in a nested catchment with generalized linear models and a distributed watershed model

T. Graeff, E. Zehe, T. Blume, T. Francke, B. Schröder

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

33 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study focuses on the prediction of event-based runoff coefficients (an important descriptor of flood events) for nested catchments up to an area of 50km2 in the Eastern Ore Mountains. The four main objectives of the study are (i) the prediction of runoff coefficients with the statistical method of generalized linear models, (ii) the comparison of the results of the linear models with estimates of a distributed conceptual model, (iii) the comparison of the dynamics of observed soil moisture and simulated saturation deficit of the hydrological model and (iv) the analysis of the relationship between runoff coefficient and observed and simulated wetness. Different predictor variables were selected to describe the runoff coefficient and were differentiated into variables describing the catchment's antecedent wetness and meteorological forcing. The best statistical model was estimated in a stepwise approach on the basis of hierarchical partitioning, an exhaustive search algorithm and model validation with jackknifing. We then applied the rainfall runoff model WaSiM ETH to predict the runoff processes for the two larger catchments. Locally measured small-scale soil moisture (acquired at a scale of four to five magnitudes smaller than the catchment) was identified as one of the key predictor variables for the estimation of the runoff coefficient with the general linear model. It was found that the relationship betweenobserved and simulated (using WaSiM ETH) wetness is strongly hysteretic. The runoff coefficients derived from the rainfall runoff simulations systematically underestimate the observed values.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3749-3769
Number of pages21
JournalHydrological Processes
Volume26
Issue number24
DOIs
StatePublished - 29 Nov 2012

Keywords

  • Antecedent wetness
  • GLM
  • Nested catchment
  • Runoff coefficient
  • Soil moisture

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