Water Science and Engineering (Jan 2013)

Test of newly developed conceptual hydrological model for simulation of rain-on-snow events in forested watershed

  • Si-min Qu,
  • Han Liu,
  • Yan-ping Cui,
  • Peng Shi,
  • Wei-min Bao,
  • Zhong-bo Yu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3882/j.issn.1674-2370.2013.01.003
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 31 – 43

Abstract

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A conceptual hydrological model that links the Xin'anjiang hydrological model and a physically based snow energy and mass balance model, described as the XINSNOBAL model, was developed in this study for simulating rain-on-snow events that commonly occur in the Pacific Northwest of the United States. The resultant model was applied to the Lookout Creek Watershed in the H. J. Andrews Experimental Forest in the western Cascade Mountains of Oregon, and its ability to simulate streamflow was evaluated. The simulation was conducted at 24-hour and one-hour time scales for the period of 1996 to 2005. The results indicated that runoff and peak discharge could be underestimated if snowpack accumulation and snowmelt under rain-on-snow conditions were not taken into account. The average deterministic coefficient of the hourly model in streamflow simulation in the calibration stage was 0.837, which was significantly improved over the value of 0.762 when the Xin'anjiang model was used alone. Good simulation performance of the XINSNOBAL model in the WS10 catchment, using the calibrated parameter of the Lookout Creek Watershed for proxy-basin testing, demonstrates that transplanting model parameters between similar watersheds can provide a useful tool for discharge forecasting in ungauged basins.

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