Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4577347 Journal of Hydrology 2011 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryBetter simulation and earlier prediction of river low flows are needed for improved water management. Here, a top–down structural analysis to improve a hydrological model in a low-flow simulation perspective is presented. Starting from a simple but efficient rainfall–runoff model (GR5J), we analyse the sensitivity of low-flow simulations to progressive modifications of the model’s structure. These modifications correspond to the introduction of more complex routing schemes and/or the addition of simple representations of groundwater–surface water exchanges. In these tests, we wished to improve low-flow simulation while avoiding performance losses in high-flow conditions, i.e. keeping a general model.In a typical downward modelling perspective, over 60 versions of the model were tested on a large set of French catchments corresponding to various low-flow conditions, and performance was evaluated using criteria emphasising errors in low-flow conditions. The results indicate that several best performing structures yielded quite similar levels of efficiency. The addition of a new flow component to the routing part of the model yielded the most significant improvement. In spite of the close performance of several model structures, we conclude by proposing a modified model version of GR5J with a single additional parameter.

► We detail a downward approach for improving a model for low-flow simulation. ► We compare several model structures on a large set of catchments and propose an improved model version. ► We compare the model with existing ones, with satisfactory results.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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