Publication | Open Access
Bias in streamflow projections due to climate‐induced shifts in catchment response
120
Citations
44
References
2016
Year
Model SkillHydrological PredictionEngineeringHydrologic EngineeringCatchment ResponseEarth ScienceCatchment ScaleWatershed HydrologyHydroclimate ModelingHydrological ModelingStreamflow ProjectionsClimate ChangeHydrometeorologySurface RunoffGeographyAbstract DemandHydrologyWater BalanceClimatologyClimate‐induced ShiftsWater Resources
Abstract Demand for quantitative assessments of likely climate change impact on runoff is increasing and conceptual rainfall‐runoff models are essential tools for this task. However, the capacity of these models to extrapolate under changing climatic conditions is questionable. A number of studies have found that model predictive skill decreases with changed climatic conditions, especially when predicting drier climates. We found that model skill only declines under certain circumstances, in particular, when a catchment's rainfall‐runoff processes change due to changed climatic drivers. In catchments where the rainfall‐runoff relationship changed significantly in response to prolonged dry conditions, runoff was consistently overestimated. In contrast, modeled runoff was unbiased in catchments where the rainfall‐runoff relationship remained unchanged during the dry period. These conclusions were not model dependent. Our results suggest that current projections of runoff under climate change may provide overly optimistic assessments of future water availability in some regions expecting rainfall reductions.
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