Separating Wet and Dry Years to Improve Calibration of SWAT in Barrett Watershed, Southern California

Authors

  • Xin Gao College of Geographical Sciences, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou-350007, China.
  • Xingwei Chen College of Geographical Sciences, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou-350007, China, Fujian Provincial Engineering Research Center for Monitoring and Assessing Terrestrial Disasters, Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou-350007, China and State Key Laboratory of Subtropical Mountain Ecology (Funded by Ministry of Science and Technology and Fujian Province), Fujian Normal University, Fuzhou-350007, China.
  • Trent W. Biggs Department of Geography, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182-4493, USA.
  • Huaxia Yao Environmental Monitoring and Reporting Branch, Ontario Ministry of Environment, Conservation and Parks, Ontario, Canada.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-81-19217-01-4/CH7

Keywords:

Runoff, dry year, parameter, calibration, SWAT, Barrett watershed

Abstract

Hydrological models often perform poorly in simulating dry years in regions with large inter-annual variability in rainfall. We calibrated the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model to dry and wet years separately, using the semi-arid Barrett watershed on the west coast of USA as an example. We used hydrological and meteorological data from 1980–2010 to calibrate the SWAT model parameters, compared the monthly runoff results simulated by SWAT using a traditional calibration for the entire runoff series with results using a calibration with the wet and dry year series, and analyzed differences in the most sensitive parameters between the wet and dry year series. The results showed that (1) the SWAT model calibrated to the entire runoff series produced significant differences in simulation efficiency between the wet years and dry years, with lower efficiency during the dry years; (2) the calibration with separate wet and dry years greatly enhanced the SWAT model’s simulation efficiency for both wet and dry years; (3) differences in hydrological conditions between wet and dry years were represented by changes in the values of the six most sensitive parameters, including baseflow recession rates, channel infiltration rates, Soil Conservation Service (SCS) curve number, soil evaporation, shallow aquifer flow, and soil water holding capacity. Future work can attempt to determine the physical processes that underlie these parameter changes and their impact on the hydrological response of the semi-arid watersheds.

Published

2023-04-21

How to Cite

Xin Gao, Xingwei Chen, Trent W. Biggs, & Huaxia Yao. (2023). Separating Wet and Dry Years to Improve Calibration of SWAT in Barrett Watershed, Southern California. Collective Studies on Evapotranspiration, Drought Propagation, Catchment Modelling, and Changes in Ice Snow and Forest, 128–148. https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/mono/978-81-19217-01-4/CH7