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Peer-reviewed

Flood spatial coherence, triggers, and performance in hydrological simulations: large-sample evaluation of four streamflow-calibrated models

Manuela I. Brunner, Lieke Melsen, Andrew W. Wood, Oldřich Rakovec, Naoki Mizukami, Wouter Knoben, Martyn Clark

Hydrology and earth system sciences · 2021

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Summary

Abstract. Floods cause extensive damage, especially if they affect large regions. Assessments of current, local, and regional flood hazards and their future changes often involve the use of hydrologic models. A reliable hydrologic model ideally reproduces both local flood characteristics and spatial aspects of flooding under current and future climate conditions. However, uncertainties in simulated floods can be considerable and yield unreliable hazard and climate change impact assessments. This study evaluates the extent to which models calibrated according to standard model calibration metrics such as the widely used Kling–Gupta efficiency are able to capture flood spatial coherence and triggering mechanisms. To highlight challenges related to flood simulations, we investigate how flood

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.5194/hess-25-105-2021
Catalogue ID
SNmokeh0yo-w5x4uw
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