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COMPARISON OF GRIDDED AND MEASURED RAINFALL DATA FOR BASIN-SCALE HYDROLOGICAL STUDIES
Muñoz, Enrique; Álvarez, César; Billib, Max; Arumí, José Luis & Rivera, Diego
Abstract
Global gridded climatological (GGC) datasets, including precipitation and temperature, are becoming more and more
precise, accessible, and common, but the utility of these datasets and their limits for hydrological research are still not well
determined. In this paper, we compare the performance of two hydrological models that are identical in structure but built
with two different inputs: rainfall from rain gauge stations and from a GGC dataset. The objective is to evaluate the utility
of gridded datasets in water resource availability studies mainly for hydroelectric and agricultural purposes. The Andean
basin of the Laja River, located in south-central Chile, was chosen for this study. It was based on an 18-yr simulation, and
it was concluded that i) with gridded climatological datasets in a monthly water balance model, it is possible to reproduce
the behavior of an Andean basin with good goodness-of-fit, but with worse results than when using inputs from rain gauges;
ii) the amount of rainfall in gridded datasets in the Andean area of the Laja basin is underestimated and damped, an effect
which is transferred to the simulated flows; and iii) regarding the main activities in the Laja basin, global gridded datasets
are useful for hydrological studies with agricultural purposes prior to a treatment that considers the orographic effect. On
the other hand, these datasets are useless for hydroelectric purposes due to the large underestimation of peak flows obtained
during the rainy season.
Keywords
Flow simulation, monthly water balance, surface water hydrology, water resources
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