Performance assessment of interpolation techniques for optimal areal rainfall–temperature estimation: the case of two contrasting river catchments, Akaki and Mille, in Ethiopia

Author:

Bati Hirpo Gudeta1ORCID,Tegaye Tenalem Ayenew2,Agumassie Tena Alemirew3

Affiliation:

1. a Africa Center of Excellence for Water Management, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

2. b School of Earth Sciences, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

3. c Ethiopian Institute of Water Resources, Addis Ababa University, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

Abstract

Abstract In the topographic complex catchments, landscape features have a significant impact on the spatial prediction of rainfall and temperature. In this study, performance assessments were made of various interpolation techniques for the prediction of the spatial distribution of rainfall and temperature in the Mille and Akaki River catchments, Ethiopia, through an improved approach on selecting the auxiliary variables as a covariate. Two geostatistical interpolation techniques, ordinary kriging (OK) and kriging with external drift (KED), and one deterministic interpolation technique, inverse distance weighting (IDW), were tested through a leave-one-out cross-validation (LOOCV) procedure. The results indicated that using the multivariate geostatistical interpolation technique (KED) with the auxiliary variables as a covsariate outperformed the univariate geostatistical (OK) and deterministic (IDW) techniques for the spatial interpolation of sampled rainfall–temperature data in both contrasting catchments, Akaki and Mille, with the lowest estimation errors (e.g., for Mille annual mean rainfall: root mean square error=75.32, 77.34, 245.72, mean bias error=3.70, −33.18, −15.61, mean absolute error=67.99, 69.51, 192.64) using KED with the combination of elevation and easting as a covariate, IDW and OK, respectively. Thus, the study confirmed that the use of elevation and easting/northing coordinates as predictors in geostatistical interpolation techniques could significantly improve the spatial prediction of climatic variables.

Funder

Africa Center of Excellence for Water Management (ACEWM), Addis Ababa University

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

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

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