Publication Date:
2012-04-19
Description:
Simulation of watershed scale hydrologic and water quality processes is important for watershed assessments. Proper characterization of the accuracy of these simulations, particularly in cases with limited observed data, is critical. The Soil Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) is frequently used for watershed scale simulation. The accuracy of the model was assessed by extrapolating calibration results from a well studied Coastal Plain watershed in Southwest Georgia, U.S.A., to watersheds within the same geographic region without further calibration. SWAT was calibrated and validated on a 16.7 km 2 subwatershed within the Little River Experimental Watershed (LREW) by varying six model parameters. The optimized parameter set was then applied to a watershed of similar land use and soils, a smaller watershed with different land use and soils, and three larger watersheds within the same drainage system without further calibration. Simulation results with percent bias (PB) ±15% ≤ PB 〈 ±25% and Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency (NSE) 0.50 〈 NSE ≤ 0.65 were considered to be satisfactory, while those with PB 〈 ±10% and 0.75 〈 NSE ≤ 1.00 were considered very good. Based upon these criteria, simulation results for the five non-calibration watersheds were satisfactory to very good. Differences across watersheds were attributed to differences in soils, land use, and surficial aquifer characteristics. These results indicate SWAT can be a useful tool for predicting streamflow for ungauged watersheds with similar physical characteristics to the calibration watershed studied here and provide an indication of the accuracy of hydrologic simulations for ungauged watersheds. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Print ISSN:
0885-6087
Electronic ISSN:
1099-1085
Topics:
Architecture, Civil Engineering, Surveying
,
Geography
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