Assessing the influence of water sampling strategy on the performance of tracer-aided hydrological modeling in a mountainous basin on the Tibetan Plateau
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Published:2022-08-10
Issue:15
Volume:26
Page:4147-4167
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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:
Nan Yi, He Zhihua, Tian FuqiangORCID, Wei Zhongwang, Tian LideORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Tracer-aided hydrological models integrating water isotope modules into the
simulation of runoff generation are useful tools to reduce uncertainty of
hydrological modeling in cold basins that are featured by complex runoff
processes and multiple runoff components. However, there is little guidance
on the strategy of field water sampling for isotope analysis to run
tracer-aided hydrological models, which is especially important for large
mountainous basins on the Tibetan Plateau (TP) where field water sampling
work is highly costly. This study conducted a set of numerical experiments
based on the THREW-T (Tsinghua Representative Elementary Watershed -
Tracer-aided version) model to evaluate the reliance of the tracer-aided
modeling performance on the availability of site measurements of water
isotope in the Yarlung Tsangpo river (YTR) basin on the TP. Data conditions
considered in the numerical experiments included the availability of glacier meltwater isotope measurement, quantity of site measurements of
precipitation isotope, and the variable collecting strategies for stream
water samples. Our results suggested that (1) in high-mountain basins where
glacier meltwater samples for isotope analysis are not available, estimating glacier meltwater isotope by an offset parameter from the precipitation isotope is a feasible way to force the tracer-aided hydrological model. Using a set of glacier meltwater δ18O that were 2 ‰–9 ‰ lower than the mean precipitation δ18O resulted in only small changes in the model performance and the quantifications of contributions of runoff components (CRCs, smaller than 5 %) to streamflow in the YTR basin. (2) The strategy of field sampling for site precipitation to correct the global gridded isotope product of isoGSM (isotope-incorporated global spectral model) for model forcing should be carefully designed. Collecting precipitation samples at sites falling in the same altitude tends to be worse at representing the ground pattern of precipitation δ18O over the basin than collecting precipitation samples from sites in a range of altitudes. (3) Collecting weekly stream water samples at multiple sites in the wet and warm seasons is the optimal strategy for calibrating and evaluating a tracer-aided hydrological model in the YTR basin. It is highly recommended to increase the number of stream water sampling sites rather than spending resources on extensive sampling of stream water at a sole site for multiple years. These results provide important implications for collecting site measurements of water isotopes for running tracer-aided hydrological models to improve quantifications of CRCs in high-mountain basins.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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