The role of climatic and terrain attributes in estimating baseflow recession in tropical catchments

Date

2010

Authors

Pena-Arancibia, Jorge
Van Dijk, Albert
Mulligan, M.
Bruijnzeel, L.A.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Copernicus GmbH

Abstract

The understanding of low flows in rivers is paramount more than ever as demand for water increases on a global scale. At the same time, limited streamflow data to investigate this phenomenon, particularly in the tropics, makes the provision of accurate estimations in ungauged areas an ongoing research need. This paper analysed the potential of climatic and terrain attributes of 167 tropical and sub-tropical unregulated catchments to predict baseflow recession rates. Daily streamflow data (m3 s-1) from the Global River Discharge Center (GRDC) and a linear reservoir model were used to obtain baseflow recession coefficients (kbf) for these catchments. Climatic attributes included annual and seasonal indicators of rainfall and potential evapotranspiration. Terrain attributes included indicators of catchment shape, morphology, land cover, soils and geology. Stepwise regression was used to identify the best predictors for baseflow recession coefficients. Mean annual rainfall (MAR) and aridity index (AI) were found to explain 49% of the spatial variation of kbf. The rest of climatic indices and the terrain indices average catchment slope (SLO) and tree cover were also good predictors, but co-correlated with MAR. Catchment elongation (CE), a measure of catchment shape, was also found to be statistically significant, although weakly correlated. An analysis of clusters of catchments of smaller size, showed that in these areas, presumably with some similarity of soils and geology due to proximity, residuals of the regression could be explained by SLO and CE. The approach used provides a potential alternative for kbf parameterisation in ungauged catchments.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Accurate estimation; Annual rainfall; Aridity index; Baseflows; Climatic attributes; Climatic index; Global scale; Land cover; Linear reservoirs; Low flow; Parameterisation; Potential evapotranspiration; Recession rate; Research needs; River discharge; Sp

Citation

Source

Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

Type

Journal article

Book Title

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Restricted until

2037-12-31