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Comparing ERT- and scaling-based approaches to parameterize soil hydraulic properties for spatially distributed model applications

•Characterization of soil hydraulic properties is typically conducted at a measurement scale smaller than that of simulated hydrological responses.•Soil hydraulic characterization based on laboratory drainage experiments and similar-media scaling method mimics evapotranspiration losses fairly well.•...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Advances in water resources 2019-04, Vol.126, p.155-167
Main Authors: Nasta, P., Boaga, J., Deiana, R., Cassiani, G., Romano, N.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•Characterization of soil hydraulic properties is typically conducted at a measurement scale smaller than that of simulated hydrological responses.•Soil hydraulic characterization based on laboratory drainage experiments and similar-media scaling method mimics evapotranspiration losses fairly well.•Soil hydraulic characterization based on inverse modeling of ERT data from an infiltration experiment yields good predictions of runoff. Optimal management of water resources depends on the prediction capability of process-based hydrological models. New generation Richards equation-based distributed models provide detailed descriptions of hydrological processes that, however, depend highly on the proper assessment of the spatial variability of soil hydraulic properties (SHPs). Field surveys and sampling campaigns commonly provide sparse local scale measurements of SHPs. Nevertheless, the challenge is to transfer this information from the “observation scale” to the “model scale” by increasing as much as possible the prediction efficiency with affordable practical burdens. The performances of two parameterization approaches are compared in this study in terms of outputs of water budget simulated by the HydroGeoSphere (HGS) model in a small catchment. The first approach relies on knowledge of soil hydraulic data from soil cores (centimeter scale) collected in many locations of the study site and the application of the Miller-Miller scaling technique enabling the spatial variability of the so-called “aggregated” SHPs to be described over the spatial domain of interest. The second approach, instead, estimates a set of “equivalent” SHPs through the numerical inversion of geophysical data measured with the electrical resistivity tomography (ERT) during an infiltration experiment (meter scale) performed in only one plot-transect of the study catchment. The SHPs obtained by these two approaches are then assigned to each numerical grid cell in HGS to simulate the catchment-scale soil water budget at daily time resolution. Within the framework of a functional evaluation, we compare the performance of these two soil hydraulic parameterization approaches in terms of streamflow (viewed as a lumped flux) and near-surface soil effective saturation patterns (viewed as distributed state variables). Better comparisons between observed and simulated streamflow values are obtained when the study site is parameterized using the “equivalent” SHPs. Conversely, the HGS water budget simu
ISSN:0309-1708
1872-9657
DOI:10.1016/j.advwatres.2019.02.014