Challenges in developing a global gradient-based groundwater model (G<sup>3</sup>M v1.0) for the integration into a global hydrological model
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Published:2019-06-18
Issue:6
Volume:12
Page:2401-2418
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ISSN:1991-9603
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Container-title:Geoscientific Model Development
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Geosci. Model Dev.
Author:
Reinecke RobertORCID, Foglia Laura, Mehl Steffen, Trautmann TimORCID, Cáceres Denise, Döll PetraORCID
Abstract
Abstract. In global hydrological models, groundwater (GW) is
typically represented by a bucket-like linear groundwater reservoir.
Reservoir models, however, (1) can only simulate GW discharge to surface
water (SW) bodies but not recharge from SW to GW, (2) provide no information
on the location of the GW table, and (3) assume that there is no GW flow
among grid cells. This may lead, for example, to an underestimation of
groundwater resources in semiarid areas where GW is often replenished by SW
or to an underestimation of evapotranspiration where the GW table is close
to the land surface. To overcome these limitations, it is necessary to replace
the reservoir model in global hydrological models with a hydraulic head
gradient-based GW flow model. We present G3M, a new global gradient-based GW model with
a spatial resolution of 5′ (arcminutes), which is to be integrated into the 0.5∘
WaterGAP Global Hydrology Model (WGHM). The newly developed model framework
enables in-memory coupling to WGHM while keeping overall runtime relatively
low, which allows sensitivity analyses, calibration, and data assimilation.
This paper presents the G3M concept and model design
decisions that are specific to the large grid size required for a global-scale model. Model results under steady-state naturalized conditions, i.e.,
neglecting GW abstractions, are shown. Simulated hydraulic heads show better
agreement to observations around the world compared to the model output of de Graaf et
al. (2015). Locations of simulated SW recharge to GW are found, as is
expected, in dry and mountainous regions but areal extent of SW recharge may
be underestimated. Globally, GW discharge to rivers is by far the dominant
flow component such that lateral GW flows only become a large fraction of
total diffuse and focused recharge in the case of losing rivers, some
mountainous areas, and some areas with very low GW recharge. A strong
sensitivity of simulated hydraulic heads to the spatial resolution of the
model and the related choice of the water table elevation of surface water
bodies was found. We suggest to investigate how global-scale groundwater
modeling at 5′ spatial resolution can benefit from more highly resolved
land surface elevation data.
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
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