Seasonal and Regional Patterns in Performance for a Baltic Sea Drainage Basin Hydrologic Model |
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Authors: | Steve W. Lyon Roya Meidani Ype van der Velde Helen E. Dahlke Dennis P. Swaney Carl‐Magnus Mörth Christoph Humborg |
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Affiliation: | 1. Baltic Nest Institute, Baltic Sea Center, Sweden;2. Department of Physical Geography and Quaternary Geology, Sweden;3. Soil Geography and Landscape, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands;4. Department of Land, Air, and Water Resources, University of California‐Davis, Davis, California;5. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York;6. Department of Geological Sciences, Stockholm, Sweden;7. Applied Environmental Science, Stockholm University, Sweden |
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Abstract: | This study evaluates the ability of the Catchment SIMulation (CSIM) hydrologic model to describe seasonal and regional variations in river discharge over the entire Baltic Sea drainage basin (BSDB) based on 31 years of monthly simulation from 1970 through 2000. To date, the model has been successfully applied to simulate annual fluxes of water from the catchments draining into the Baltic Sea. Here, we consider spatiotemporal bias in the distribution of monthly modeling errors across the BSDB since it could potentially reduce the fidelity of predictions and negatively affect the design and implementation of land‐management strategies. Within the period considered, the CSIM model accurately reproduced the annual flows across the BSDB; however, it tended to underpredict the proportion of discharge during high‐flow periods (i.e., spring months) and overpredict during the summer low flow periods. While the general overpredictions during summer periods are spread across all the subbasins of the BSDB, the underprediction during spring periods is seen largely in the northern regions. By implementing a genetic algorithm calibration procedure and/or seasonal parameterization of subsurface water flows for a subset of the catchments modeled, we demonstrate that it is possible to improve the model performance albeit at the cost of increased parameterization and potential loss of parsimony. |
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Keywords: | Baltic Sea drainage basin Baltic NEST hydrological modeling generalized watershed loading function (GWLF) |
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