Roughness‐based Method for Simulating Hydraulic Consequences of both Woody Debris Clogging and Breakage at Bridges in Basin‐scale Flood Modelling

Author(s):  
Francesco Macchione ◽  
Margherita Lombardo
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elia Cantoni i Gomez ◽  
Yves Tramblay ◽  
Hamouda Dakhlaoui ◽  
Vera Thiemig ◽  
Peter Salamon

<p>Maghreb countries, like the rest of the Mediterranean region, are vulnerable to flood events which often cause disastrous damages and a large number of fatalities. In Europe, this problematic has been addressed by the implementation of the Copernicus European Flood Awareness System (EFAS) that, together with the national and regional flooding schemes, provide a robust tool for flood forecasting. Nevertheless, Maghreb countries do not have such national or regional flooding schemes and, although EFAS covers their northern territories, its forecast capability for these regions is limited as its hydrological model (LISFLOOD) remains uncalibrated due to data unavailability. As data become available, daily river discharge data of 21 Tunisian basins from 1980 to 2018 was used to implement and compare different flood modelling strategies including LISFLOOD and simpler models such as GR4J and IHACRES, which were calibrated for each basin separately. The LISFLOOD model was first implemented with its default parametrization to the 21 basins considered using both, the ERA5 dataset, and observed precipitation data from rain-gauges. Although the use of observations slightly increases the model performance, the performances achieved are substantially lower than with simpler calibrated hydrological models (i.e. GR4J and IHACRES); whereas these simpler models generally present KGE values over 0.4, just four out of the 21 catchments have positive KGE values when discharge is simulated with LISFLOOD.</p><p>The model sensitivity to six of its main parameters (Xinanjiang, preferential flow, upper groundwater time constant, lower groundwater time constant, percolation and Manning’s coefficient) was assessed through the application of the Latin hypercube sampling (LHS) scheme. The LHS was used to generate 1000 near-random samples of LISFLOOD parameters sets, to investigate the model sensitivity to these parameters within the 21 basins. This process was repeated constraining the parameter range progressively in order to achieve an optimal parameter set for each catchment, as well as an additional parametrization that could be used in all catchments while resulting into satisfactory performances. Additionally, a Sobol sensitivity analysis was conducted to further investigate the sensitivity of the parameters mentioned above. This analysis revealed that, for extreme discharge values, for extreme discharge values, the most sensitive parameters are the Upper and Lower groundwater time constants and the exponent in Xinanjiang equation for the soil infiltration capacity. Different calibration and validation experiments were carried out with different objective functions, in order to identify the best parameters sets suitable for flood modelling at regional scale.  </p>


2009 ◽  
Vol 61 (1) ◽  
pp. 107-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mathrubutham Ravikumar ◽  
Kandikere R. Sridhar ◽  
Thangaraju Sivakumar ◽  
Kishore S. Karamchand ◽  
Nallusamy Sivakumar ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hamed D. Ibrahim

North and South Atlantic lateral volume exchange is a key component of the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC) embedded in Earth’s climate. Northward AMOC heat transport within this exchange mitigates the large heat loss to the atmosphere in the northern North Atlantic. Because of inadequate climate data, observational basin-scale studies of net interbasin exchange between the North and South Atlantic have been limited. Here ten independent climate datasets, five satellite-derived and five analyses, are synthesized to show that North and South Atlantic climatological net lateral volume exchange is partitioned into two seasonal regimes. From late-May to late-November, net lateral volume flux is from the North to the South Atlantic; whereas from late-November to late-May, net lateral volume flux is from the South to the North Atlantic. This climatological characterization offers a framework for assessing seasonal variations in these basins and provides a constraint for climate models that simulate AMOC dynamics.


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