Regional-scale flood impacts on a small mountainous catchment in Thailand under a changing climate

Author:

Rojpratak Sawitree12,Supharatid Seree1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. a Climate Change and Disaster Center, Rangsit University, Pathumthani 12000, Thailand

2. b College of Engineering, Rangsit University, Pathumthani 12000, Thailand

Abstract

Abstract Extreme rainfall and flooding are common during the summer monsoon season in Thailand. In this study, we utilized Robust Empirical Quantile Mapping (RQUANT) to correct the bias in precipitation, and total runoff data obtained from the latest Couple Model Intercomparison Project phase 6 (CMIP6) for the upper Lam Takong river basin. Five different methods were employed to estimate the river discharge and four estimations based on Budyko functions. Our analysis revealed that the ‘Total runoff’ method yielded the most accurate representation of the observed discharge. Impacts of change in land use are examined in terms of compound roughness. The Multi-Model Ensemble (MME) precipitation under medium-emission (SSP2-4.5) and high-emission (SSP5-8.5) scenarios is projected to increase by 5.74 and 10.91%, respectively. Correspondingly, the discharges are expected to increase by 4.57 and 11.05% for the far-future periods. In general, the Flo-2D model satisfactorily simulated the water level in the main channel but it underestimated small inundation depth (<0.5 m) across the floodplain. Comparing inundation maps among different scenarios and timelines, changes in the inundation area were relatively small (0.05%), especially when compared to changes in floodplain storage (6.85%) due to the mountainous nature of the river basin.

Funder

Thailand Research Fund

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Atmospheric Science,Water Science and Technology,Global and Planetary Change

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