Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Calibration of hydrological models using flow-d...

Associated organisational unit

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves. / Westerberg, I. K.; Guerrero, J. L.; Younger, P. M. et al.
In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, Vol. 15, No. 7, 01.12.2011, p. 2205-2227.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Westerberg, IK, Guerrero, JL, Younger, PM, Beven, KJ, Seibert, J, Halldin, S, Freer, JE & Xu, CY 2011, 'Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves', Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, vol. 15, no. 7, pp. 2205-2227. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011

APA

Westerberg, I. K., Guerrero, J. L., Younger, P. M., Beven, K. J., Seibert, J., Halldin, S., Freer, J. E., & Xu, C. Y. (2011). Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences, 15(7), 2205-2227. https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011

Vancouver

Westerberg IK, Guerrero JL, Younger PM, Beven KJ, Seibert J, Halldin S et al. Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves. Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 2011 Dec 1;15(7):2205-2227. doi: 10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011

Author

Westerberg, I. K. ; Guerrero, J. L. ; Younger, P. M. et al. / Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves. In: Hydrology and Earth System Sciences. 2011 ; Vol. 15, No. 7. pp. 2205-2227.

Bibtex

@article{ee43b18af80f42f3a02464249cff9338,
title = "Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves",
abstract = "The degree of belief we have in predictions from hydrologic models will normally depend on how well they can reproduce observations. Calibrations with traditional performance measures, such as the Nash-Sutcliffe model efficiency, are challenged by problems including: (1) uncertain discharge data, (2) variable sensitivity of different performance measures to different flow magnitudes, (3) influence of unknown input/output errors and (4) inability to evaluate model performance when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. This paper explores a calibration method using flow-duration curves (FDCs) to address these problems. The method focuses on reproducing the observed discharge frequency distribution rather than the exact hydrograph. It consists of applying limits of acceptability for selected evaluation points (EPs) on the observed uncertain FDC in the extended GLUE approach. Two ways of selecting the EPs were tested-based on equal intervals of discharge and of volume of water. The method was tested and compared to a calibration using the traditional model efficiency for the daily four-parameter WASMOD model in the Paso La Ceiba catchment in Honduras and for Dynamic TOPMODEL evaluated at an hourly time scale for the Brue catchment in Great Britain. The volume method of selecting EPs gave the best results in both catchments with better calibrated slow flow, recession and evaporation than the other criteria. Observed and simulated time series of uncertain discharges agreed better for this method both in calibration and prediction in both catchments. An advantage with the method is that the rejection criterion is based on an estimation of the uncertainty in discharge data and that the EPs of the FDC can be chosen to reflect the aims of the modelling application, e.g. using more/less EPs at high/low flows. While the method appears less sensitive to epistemic input/output errors than previous use of limits of acceptability applied directly to the time series of discharge, it still requires a reasonable representation of the distribution of inputs. Additional constraints might therefore be required in catchments subject to snow and where peak-flow timing at sub-daily time scales is of high importance. The results suggest that the calibration method can be useful when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. The method could also be suitable for calibration to regional FDCs while taking uncertainties in the hydrological model and data into account.",
author = "Westerberg, {I. K.} and Guerrero, {J. L.} and Younger, {P. M.} and Beven, {K. J.} and J. Seibert and S. Halldin and Freer, {J. E.} and Xu, {C. Y.}",
year = "2011",
month = dec,
day = "1",
doi = "10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011",
language = "English",
volume = "15",
pages = "2205--2227",
journal = "Hydrology and Earth System Sciences",
issn = "1027-5606",
publisher = "Copernicus Gesellschaft mbH",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Calibration of hydrological models using flow-duration curves

AU - Westerberg, I. K.

AU - Guerrero, J. L.

AU - Younger, P. M.

AU - Beven, K. J.

AU - Seibert, J.

AU - Halldin, S.

AU - Freer, J. E.

AU - Xu, C. Y.

PY - 2011/12/1

Y1 - 2011/12/1

N2 - The degree of belief we have in predictions from hydrologic models will normally depend on how well they can reproduce observations. Calibrations with traditional performance measures, such as the Nash-Sutcliffe model efficiency, are challenged by problems including: (1) uncertain discharge data, (2) variable sensitivity of different performance measures to different flow magnitudes, (3) influence of unknown input/output errors and (4) inability to evaluate model performance when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. This paper explores a calibration method using flow-duration curves (FDCs) to address these problems. The method focuses on reproducing the observed discharge frequency distribution rather than the exact hydrograph. It consists of applying limits of acceptability for selected evaluation points (EPs) on the observed uncertain FDC in the extended GLUE approach. Two ways of selecting the EPs were tested-based on equal intervals of discharge and of volume of water. The method was tested and compared to a calibration using the traditional model efficiency for the daily four-parameter WASMOD model in the Paso La Ceiba catchment in Honduras and for Dynamic TOPMODEL evaluated at an hourly time scale for the Brue catchment in Great Britain. The volume method of selecting EPs gave the best results in both catchments with better calibrated slow flow, recession and evaporation than the other criteria. Observed and simulated time series of uncertain discharges agreed better for this method both in calibration and prediction in both catchments. An advantage with the method is that the rejection criterion is based on an estimation of the uncertainty in discharge data and that the EPs of the FDC can be chosen to reflect the aims of the modelling application, e.g. using more/less EPs at high/low flows. While the method appears less sensitive to epistemic input/output errors than previous use of limits of acceptability applied directly to the time series of discharge, it still requires a reasonable representation of the distribution of inputs. Additional constraints might therefore be required in catchments subject to snow and where peak-flow timing at sub-daily time scales is of high importance. The results suggest that the calibration method can be useful when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. The method could also be suitable for calibration to regional FDCs while taking uncertainties in the hydrological model and data into account.

AB - The degree of belief we have in predictions from hydrologic models will normally depend on how well they can reproduce observations. Calibrations with traditional performance measures, such as the Nash-Sutcliffe model efficiency, are challenged by problems including: (1) uncertain discharge data, (2) variable sensitivity of different performance measures to different flow magnitudes, (3) influence of unknown input/output errors and (4) inability to evaluate model performance when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. This paper explores a calibration method using flow-duration curves (FDCs) to address these problems. The method focuses on reproducing the observed discharge frequency distribution rather than the exact hydrograph. It consists of applying limits of acceptability for selected evaluation points (EPs) on the observed uncertain FDC in the extended GLUE approach. Two ways of selecting the EPs were tested-based on equal intervals of discharge and of volume of water. The method was tested and compared to a calibration using the traditional model efficiency for the daily four-parameter WASMOD model in the Paso La Ceiba catchment in Honduras and for Dynamic TOPMODEL evaluated at an hourly time scale for the Brue catchment in Great Britain. The volume method of selecting EPs gave the best results in both catchments with better calibrated slow flow, recession and evaporation than the other criteria. Observed and simulated time series of uncertain discharges agreed better for this method both in calibration and prediction in both catchments. An advantage with the method is that the rejection criterion is based on an estimation of the uncertainty in discharge data and that the EPs of the FDC can be chosen to reflect the aims of the modelling application, e.g. using more/less EPs at high/low flows. While the method appears less sensitive to epistemic input/output errors than previous use of limits of acceptability applied directly to the time series of discharge, it still requires a reasonable representation of the distribution of inputs. Additional constraints might therefore be required in catchments subject to snow and where peak-flow timing at sub-daily time scales is of high importance. The results suggest that the calibration method can be useful when observation time periods for discharge and model input data do not overlap. The method could also be suitable for calibration to regional FDCs while taking uncertainties in the hydrological model and data into account.

U2 - 10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011

DO - 10.5194/hess-15-2205-2011

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:80054710603

VL - 15

SP - 2205

EP - 2227

JO - Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

JF - Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

SN - 1027-5606

IS - 7

ER -