Repository logo
 

Towards reducing the high cost of parameter sensitivity analysis in hydrologic modelling: a regional parameter sensitivity analysis approach

Date

2023

Authors

Larabi, Samah
Mai, Juliane
Schnorbus, Markus A.
Tolson, Bryan A.
Zwiers, Francis

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Hydrology and Earth System Sciences

ORCID

Type

Postprint

Degree Level

Abstract

Land surface models have many parameters that have a spatially variable impact on model outputs. In applying these models, sensitivity analysis (SA) is sometimes performed as an initial step to select calibration parameters. As these models are applied on large domains, performing sensitivity analysis across the domain is computationally prohibitive. Here, using a VIC deployment to a large domain as an example, we show that watershed classification based on climatic attributes and vegetation land cover helps to identify the spatial pattern of parameter sensitivity within the domain at a reduced cost. We evaluate the sensitivity of 44 VIC model parameters with regard to streamflow, evapotranspiration and snow water equivalent over 25 basins with a median size of 5078 km2 15 . Basins are clustered based on their climatic and land cover attributes. Performance of transferring parameter sensitivity between basins of the same cluster is evaluated by the F1 score. Results show that two donor basins per cluster are sufficient to correctly identify sensitive parameters in a target basin, with F1 scores ranging between 0.66 (evapotranspiration) to 1 (snow water equivalent). While climatic attributes are sufficient to identify sensitive parameters for streamflow and evapotranspiration, including vegetation class significantly improves skill in identifying sensitive parameters for snow water equivalent. This work reveals that there is an opportunity to leverage climate and land cover attributes to greatly increase the efficiency of parameter sensitivity analysis and facilitate more rapid deployment of land surface models over large spatial domains.

Description

Accepted manuscript submitted to HESS.

Keywords

Water research, Land surface models, Hydrological modelling, River basins, Watershed classification, Streamflow, Evapotranspiration, Snow water eqivalent, Climate models, Land cover, Variable Infiltration Capacity model (VIC)

Citation

Degree

Department

Program

Advisor

Committee

Citation

Part Of

item.page.relation.ispartofseries

DOI

item.page.identifier.pmid

item.page.identifier.pmcid