Publication | Closed Access
Toward improved streamflow forecasts: value of semidistributed modeling
254
Citations
18
References
2001
Year
Forecasting MethodologyStreamflow RoutingEngineeringHydrologic EngineeringStreaming DataEarth ScienceData ScienceCatchment ScaleWatershed HydrologyManagementSpatial DistributionSoil MoistureHydroclimate ModelingHydrological ModelingStream ProcessingHydrometeorologyPredictive AnalyticsGeographyComputer ScienceForecastingHydrologyWater ResourcesSurface-water HydrologyStreamflow ForecastsLand Surface ModelingHydrological Science
The focus of this study is to assess the performance improvements of semidistributed applications of the U.S. National Weather Service Sacramento Soil Moisture Accounting model on a watershed using radar‐based remotely sensed precipitation data. Specifically, performance comparisons are made within an automated multicriteria calibration framework to evaluate the benefit of “spatial distribution” of the model input (precipitation), structural components (soil moisture and streamflow routing computations), and surface characteristics (parameters). A comparison of these results is made with those obtained through manual calibration. Results indicate that for the study watershed, there are performance improvements associated with semidistributed model applications when the watershed is partitioned into three subwatersheds; however, no additional benefit is gained from increasing the number of subwatersheds from three to eight. Improvements in model performance are demonstrably related to the spatial distribution of the model input and streamflow routing. Surprisingly, there is no improvement associated with the distribution of the surface characteristics (model parameters).
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