Has land cover a significant impact on mean annual streamflow? An international assessment using 1508 catchments

Evapotranspiration
Author

Oudin, L., Andréassian, V., Lerat, J., Michel, C.

Doi

Abstract

This paper investigates the link between vegetation types and long-term water balance in catchment areas. We focus on the most widely used water balance formulas – or models – that relate long-term annual streamflow to long-term annual rainfall and long-term potential evapotranspiration estimates. Our investigation seeks to assess whether long-term streamflow can be explained by land cover attributes. As all but one of these formulas do not use land cover information, we develop a methodology to introduce land cover information into the models’ formulations. Then, the modified formulas are compared to the original ones in terms of performance and a sensitivity analysis is performed, with a special focus on the parameters representing vegetation characteristics. In line with the global coverage of long-term water balance models, we base our work on as many basins as possible (1508) representing as large a hydroclimatic variety as possible. Results show that introducing additional degrees of freedom within the original formulas improves overall model efficiency, and that land cover information makes only a small but nonetheless significant contribution to this improvement.

Citation

Oudin, L., Andréassian, V., Lerat, J., & Michel, C. (2008). Has land cover a significant impact on mean annual streamflow? An international assessment using 1508 catchments. Journal of Hydrology, 357(3–4), 303–316. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jhydrol.2008.05.021