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Modeling Runoff Response to Land Cover and Rainfall Spatial Variability in Semi-Arid Watersheds
Authors:Mariano Hernandez  Scott N Miller  David C Goodrich  Bruce F Goff  William G Kepner  Curtis M Edmonds  K Bruce Jones
Institution:(1) Southwest Watershed Research Center, U.S. Department of Agriculture—Agricultural Research Service, 2000 East Allen Rd., Tucson, Arizona 85719, USA;(2) National Exposure Research Laboratory, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, P.O. Box 93478, Las Vegas, NV 89193, USA
Abstract:Hydrologic response is an integrated indicator of watershed condition, and significant changes in land cover may affect the overall health and function of a watershed. This paper describes a procedure for evaluating the effects of land cover change and rainfall spatial variability on watershed response. Two hydrologic models were applied on a small semi-arid watershed; one model is event-based with a one-minute time step (KINEROS), and the second is a continuous model with a daily time step (SWAT). The inputs to the models were derived from Geographic Information System (GIS) theme layers of USGS digital elevation models, the State Soil Geographic Database (STATSGO) and the Landsat-based North American Landscape Characterization classification (NALC) in conjunction with available literature and look up tables. Rainfall data from a network of 10 raingauges and historical stream flow data were used to calibrate runoff depth using the continuous hydrologic model from 1966 to 1974. No calibration was carried out for the event-based model, in which six storms from the same period were used in the calculation of runoff depth and peak runoff. The assumption on which much of this study is based is that land cover change and rainfall spatial variability affect the rainfall-runoff relationships on the watershed. To validate this assumption, simulations were carried out wherein the entire watershed was transformed from the 1972 NALC land cover, which consisted of a mixture of desertscrub and grassland, to a single uniform land cover type such as riparian, forest, oak woodland, mesquite woodland, desertscrub, grassland, urban, agriculture, and barren. This study demonstrates the feasibility of using widely available data sets for parameterizing hydrologic simulation models. The simulation results show that both models were able to characterize the runoff response of the watershed due to changes of land cover.
Keywords:watershed modeling simulation  surface water hydrology  GIS
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