Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Paris A., Dias de Paiva R., Santos da Silva J., Medeiros Moreira D., Calmant Stéphane, Garambois P.A., Collischonn W., Bonnet Marie-Paule, Seyler Frédérique. (2016). Stage-discharge rating curves based on satellite altimetry and modeled discharge in the Amazon basin. Water Resources Research, 52 (5), p. 3787-3814. ISSN 0043-1397.

Titre du document
Stage-discharge rating curves based on satellite altimetry and modeled discharge in the Amazon basin
Année de publication
2016
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000379259800030
Auteurs
Paris A., Dias de Paiva R., Santos da Silva J., Medeiros Moreira D., Calmant Stéphane, Garambois P.A., Collischonn W., Bonnet Marie-Paule, Seyler Frédérique
Source
Water Resources Research, 2016, 52 (5), p. 3787-3814 ISSN 0043-1397
In this study, rating curves (RCs) were determined by applying satellite altimetry to a poorly gauged basin. This study demonstrates the synergistic application of remote sensing and watershed modeling to capture the dynamics and quantity of flow in the Amazon River Basin, respectively. Three major advancements for estimating basin-scale patterns in river discharge are described. The first advancement is the preservation of the hydrological meanings of the parameters expressed by Manning’s equation to obtain a data set containing the elevations of the river beds throughout the basin. The second advancement is the provision of parameter uncertainties and, therefore, the uncertainties in the rated discharge. The third advancement concerns estimating the discharge while considering backwater effects. We analyzed the Amazon Basin using nearly one thousand series that were obtained from ENVISAT and Jason-2 altimetry for more than 100 tributaries. Discharge values and related uncertainties were obtained from the rain-discharge MGB-IPH model. We used a global optimization algorithm based on the Monte Carlo Markov Chain and Bayesian framework to determine the rating curves. The data were randomly allocated into 80% calibration and 20% validation subsets. A comparison with the validation samples produced a Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (Ens) of 0.68. When the MGB discharge uncertainties were less than 5%, the Ens value increased to 0.81 (mean). A comparison with the in situ discharge resulted in an Ens value of 0.71 for the validation samples (and 0.77 for calibration). The Ens values at the mouths of the rivers that experienced backwater effects significantly improved when the mean monthly slope was included in the RC. Our RCs were not mission-dependent, and the Ens value was preserved when applying ENVISAT rating curves to Jason-2 altimetry at crossovers. The cease-to-flow parameter of our RCs provided a good proxy for determining river bed elevation. This proxy was validated against Acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP) cross sections with an accuracy of more than 90%. Altimetry measurements are routinely delivered within a few days, and this RC data set provides a simple and cost-effective tool for predicting discharge throughout the basin in nearly real time.
Plan de classement
Gestion, prévision en temps réel et modélisation [062EVAEAU03] ; Hydrologie [126TELAPP04]
Descripteurs
DEBIT ; NIVEAU DE L'EAU ; COURS D'EAU ; ESTIMATION ; TELEDETECTION SPATIALE ; ALTIMETRIE ; MODELISATION ; ETALONNAGE ; VALIDATION
Description Géographique
AMAZONIE ; BRESIL ; PEROU ; COLOMBIE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010067237]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010067237
Contact