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Mechanistic Simulation of Tree Effects in an Urban Water Balance Model1
Authors:Jun Wang  Theodore A Endreny  David J Nowak
Institution:1. Respectively, Adjunct Assistant Professor, Faculty of Environmental Resources and Forest Engineering, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, Syracuse, New York 13210;2. Associate Professor, Faculty of Environmental Resources and Forest Engineering, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, Syracuse, New York 13210;3. Project Leader and Research Forester, Northern Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Syracuse, New York 13210
Abstract:Abstract: A semidistributed, physical‐based Urban Forest Effects – Hydrology (UFORE‐Hydro) model was created to simulate and study tree effects on urban hydrology and guide management of urban runoff at the catchment scale. The model simulates hydrological processes of precipitation, interception, evaporation, infiltration, and runoff using data inputs of weather, elevation, and land cover along with nine channel, soil, and vegetation parameters. Weather data are pre‐processed by UFORE using Penman‐Monteith equations to provide potential evaporation terms for open water and vegetation. Canopy interception algorithms modified established routines to better account for variable density urban trees, short vegetation, and seasonal growth phenology. Actual evaporation algorithms allocate potential energy between leaf surface storage and transpiration from soil storage. Infiltration algorithms use a variable rain rate Green‐Ampt formulation and handle both infiltration excess and saturation excess ponding and runoff. Stream discharge is the sum of surface runoff and TOPMODEL‐based subsurface flow equations. Automated calibration routines that use observed discharge has been coupled to the model. Once calibrated, the model can examine how alternative tree management schemes impact urban runoff. UFORE‐Hydro model testing in the urban Dead Run catchment of Baltimore, Maryland, illustrated how trees significantly reduce runoff for low intensity and short duration precipitation events.
Keywords:UFORE‐Hydro  TOPMODEL  canopy interception  runoff reduction  urban forest management  Baltimore  Maryland  )
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