JOURNAL ARTICLE

MONTHLY RUNOFF PREDICTIONS BASED ON RAINFALL FORECASTS IN A SMALL OKLAHOMA WATERSHED1

Jürgen GarbrechtJ. M. SchneiderMichael W. Van Liew

Year: 2006 Journal:   JAWRA Journal of the American Water Resources Association Vol: 42 (5)Pages: 1285-1295   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Conditions under which monthly rainfall forecasts translate into monthly runoff predictions that could support water resources planning and management activities were investigated on a small watershed in central Oklahoma. Runoff response to rainfall forecasts was simulated using the hydrologic model SWAT. Eighteen scenarios were examined that represented combinations of wet, average, and dry antecedent rainfall conditions, with wet, normal, and dry forecasted rainfall. Results suggest that for the climatic and physiographic conditions under consideration, rainfall forecasts could offer potential application opportunities in surface water resources but only under certain conditions. Pronounced wet and dry antecedent rainfall conditions were shown to have greater impact on runoff than forecasts, particularly in the first month of a forecast period. Large forecast impacts on runoff occurred under wet antecedent conditions, when the fraction of forecasted rainfall contributing to runoff was greatest. Under dry antecedent conditions, most of the forecasted rainfall was absorbed in the soil profile, with little immediate runoff response. Persistent three‐month forecasts produced stronger impacts on runoff than one‐month forecasts due to cumulative effects in the hydrologic system. Runoff response to antecedent conditions and forecasts suggest a highly asymmetric utility function for rainfall forecasts, with greatest decision‐support potential for persistent wet forecasts under wet antecedent conditions when the forecast signal is least dampened by soil‐storage effects. Under average and dry antecedent conditions, rainfall forecasts showed little potential value for practical applications in surface water resources assessments.

Keywords:
Surface runoff Environmental science Antecedent moisture Hydrology (agriculture) Antecedent (behavioral psychology) Watershed Runoff curve number Runoff model Water resources Geology

Metrics

10
Cited By
1.00
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
29
Refs
0.82
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Hydrology and Watershed Management Studies
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
Hydrology and Drought Analysis
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change
Climate variability and models
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Global and Planetary Change

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