Assessing the sensitivity of SWAT physical parameters to potential evapotranspiration estimation methods over a coastal plain watershed in the southeastern United States

Author:

Samadi S. Zahra1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of South Carolina (USC), Columbia, SC 29208, USA

Abstract

One of the key inputs of a hydrologic budget is the potential evapotranspiration (PET), which represents the hypothetical upper limit to evapotranspirative water losses. However, different mathematical formulas proposed for defining PET often produce inconsistent results and challenge hydrological estimation. The objective of this study is to investigate the effects of the Priestley–Taylor (P–T), Hargreaves, and Penman–Monteith methods on daily streamflow simulation using the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) for the southeastern United States. PET models are compared in terms of their sensitivity to the SWAT parameters and their ability to simulate daily streamflow over a five-year simulation period. The SWAT model forced by these three PET methods and by gauged climatic dataset showed more deficiency during low and peak flow estimates. Sensitive parameters vary in magnitudes with more skew and bias in saturated soil hydraulic conductivity and shallow aquifer properties. The results indicated that streamflow simulation using the P–T method performed well especially during extreme events’ simulation.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Water Science and Technology

Reference50 articles.

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2. Calibration of the Hargreaves–Samani method for the calculation of reference evapotranspiration in different Köppen climate classes;Almorox;Hydrol. Res,2016

3. Evaluating the SWAT model for a low-gradient forested watershed in coastal South Carolina;Amatya;Trans. ASABE,2011

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