Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Siqueira V. A., Paiva R. C. D., Fleischmann A. S., Fan F. M., Ruhoff A. L., Pontes P. R. M., Paris A., Calmant Stéphane, Collischonn W. (2018). Toward continental hydrologic-hydrodynamic modeling in South America. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 22 (9), p. 4815-4842. ISSN 1027-5606.

Titre du document
Toward continental hydrologic-hydrodynamic modeling in South America
Année de publication
2018
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000445040000001
Auteurs
Siqueira V. A., Paiva R. C. D., Fleischmann A. S., Fan F. M., Ruhoff A. L., Pontes P. R. M., Paris A., Calmant Stéphane, Collischonn W.
Source
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 2018, 22 (9), p. 4815-4842 ISSN 1027-5606
Providing reliable estimates of streamflow and hydrological fluxes is a major challenge for water resources management over national and transnational basins in South America. Global hydrological models and land surface models are a possible solution to simulate the terrestrial water cycle at the continental scale, but issues about parameterization and limitations in representing lowland river systems can place constraints on these models to meet local needs. In an attempt to overcome such limitations, we extended a regional, fully coupled hydrologic-hydrodynamic model (MGB; Modelo hidrologico de Grandes Bacias) to the continental domain of South America and assessed its performance using daily river discharge, water levels from independent sources (in situ, satellite altimetry), estimates of terrestrial water storage (TWS) and evapotranspiration (ET) from remote sensing and other available global datasets. In addition, river discharge was compared with outputs from global models acquired through the eartH2Observe project (H IESSEL/CaMa-Flood, LIS-FLOOD and WaterGAP3), providing the first cross-scale assessment (regional/continental x global models) that makes use of spatially distributed, daily discharge data. A satisfactory representation of discharge and water levels was obtained (Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency, NSE > 0.6 in 55 % of the cases) and the continental model was able to capture patterns of seasonality and magnitude of TWS and ET, especially over the largest basins of South America. After the comparison with global models, we found that it is possible to obtain considerable improvement on daily river discharge, even by using current global forcing data, just by combining parameterization and better routing physics based on regional experience. Issues about the potential sources of errors related to both global- and continental-scale modeling are discussed, as well as future directions for improving large-scale model applications in this continent. We hope that our study provides important insights to reduce the gap between global and regional hydrological modeling communities.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Hydrologie [062] ; Bioclimatologie [072] ; Télédétection [126]
Description Géographique
AMERIQUE DU SUD
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010074025]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010074025
Contact