Frontiers in Earth Science (Jan 2024)

Simulated research on distributed hydrological models–a case study of the Daxi Water Basin

  • Dacheng Wang,
  • Yue Zhou,
  • Xiaolei Zhang,
  • Yalan Liu,
  • Qizhi Teng,
  • Meihong Ma

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feart.2023.1348730
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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Against the backdrop of global climate warming, the issue of flash flood disasters in small watersheds triggered by heavy rainfall is gradually becoming more prominent. Selecting an appropriate hydrological model is crucial for flash flood disaster defense. This article focuses on the Daxi Water Basin in Lianping County, Guangdong Province, as the research area. Firstly, organize the data and subject it to standardization processing. Subsequently, establish the topological relationships within the basin, construct a hydrological model for simulating flood processes in Chinese mountainous regions, and obtain a set of model parameters applicable to the specific basin. The results indicated that: ① the relative errors of flood runoff depth were all less than 7%, with an average of 4.5%; ② the relative errors of peak flow for all events were less than 6%, with an average of 4.2%; ③ peak time errors were all within ±2 h, either earlier or later than the actual peak by 1 h; ④ the Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency coefficient for floods were all greater than 0.8, with an average of 0.86. The research results above will serve as a reference and guidance for flood defense management in the Daxi Water Basin.

Keywords