Are we using the right fuel to drive hydrological models? A climate impact study in the Upper Blue Nile
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Published:2018-04-09
Issue:4
Volume:22
Page:2163-2185
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Liersch Stefan, Tecklenburg Julia, Rust HenningORCID, Dobler Andreas, Fischer Madlen, Kruschke TimORCID, Koch Hagen, Hattermann Fred Fokko
Abstract
Abstract. Climate simulations are the fuel to drive hydrological models that are used
to assess the impacts of climate change and variability on hydrological
parameters, such as river discharges, soil moisture, and evapotranspiration.
Unlike with cars, where we know which fuel the engine requires, we never know
in advance what unexpected side effects might be caused by the fuel we feed
our models with. Sometimes we increase the fuel's octane number
(bias correction) to achieve better performance and find out that the model
behaves differently but not always as was expected or desired. This study
investigates the impacts of projected climate change on the hydrology of the
Upper Blue Nile catchment using two model ensembles consisting of five global
CMIP5 Earth system models and 10 regional climate models (CORDEX Africa).
WATCH forcing data were used to calibrate an eco-hydrological model and to
bias-correct both model ensembles using slightly differing approaches. On the
one hand it was found that the bias correction methods considerably improved
the performance of average rainfall characteristics in the reference period
(1970–1999) in most of the cases. This also holds true for non-extreme
discharge conditions between Q20 and Q80. On the other hand,
bias-corrected simulations tend to overemphasize magnitudes of projected
change signals and extremes. A general weakness of both uncorrected and
bias-corrected simulations is the rather poor representation of high and low
flows and their extremes, which were often deteriorated by bias correction.
This inaccuracy is a crucial deficiency for regional impact studies dealing
with water management issues and it is therefore important to analyse model
performance and characteristics and the effect of bias correction, and
eventually to exclude some climate models from the ensemble. However, the
multi-model means of all ensembles project increasing average annual
discharges in the Upper Blue Nile catchment and a shift in seasonal patterns,
with decreasing discharges in June and July and increasing discharges from
August to November.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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