Cem. Sefton et Sm. Howarth, Relationships between dynamic response characteristics and physical descriptors of catchments in England and Wales, J HYDROL, 211(1-4), 1998, pp. 1-16
A regionalisation methodology has been applied to catchments in England and
Wales enabling estimation of daily flows for any catchment in the region f
or which physical data and records of rainfall and temperature are availabl
e. The rainfall-runoff model IHACRES has been calibrated to 60 catchments t
o obtain a set of dynamic response characteristics (DRCs) describing the hy
drological behaviour within the region. physical catchment descriptors (PCD
s) indexing topography, soil type, climate and land cover were collated and
linked to the hydrological model by overlaying catchment boundaries with a
geographical information system. Relationships were derived to describe th
e DRCs in terms of the PCDs so that the model may be used to simulate flow
for any catchment in the region, given the driving variables, i.e. rainfall
and temperature. In the England and Wales region, rainfall loss parameters
have been defined in terms of land use, climate and soil type, whilst hydr
ograph separation parameters were characterised using topographical and soi
l variables. The set of DRC-PCD relationships, which were obtained by balan
cing the dual objectives of hydrological integrity and statistical signific
ance, has been satisfactorily validated on two additional catchments within
the region. Analysis of calibration errors was aided by sensitivity tests
at one of these catchments in which flow response to variations in DRCs was
assessed. Finally, a simple land use scenario demonstrates an application
of the methodology in which variation in PCDs may be used to assess the imp
acts of environmental change. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights res
erved.