Assessing the performance of several rainfall interpolation methods as evaluated by a conceptual hydrological model
Date
2016Author
Méndez-Morales, Maikel
Calvo-Valverde, Luis Alexander
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The objective of this study was to assess the performance of several rainfall interpolation methods as evaluated by
a conceptual hydrological model. To this purpose, the upper Toro River catchment (43.15 km2) located in Costa
Rica was selected as case study. Deterministic and geostatistical interpolation methods were selected to generate
time-series of daily and hourly average rainfall over a period of 10 years (2001-2010). These time-series were used
as inputs for the HBV-TEC hydrological model and were individually calibrated against observed streamflow data.
Based on model results, the performance of the deterministic methods can be said to be comparable to that of the
geostatistical methods at daily time-steps. However, at hourly time-steps, deterministic methods considerably
outperformed geostatistical methods.
Description
Artículo
Source
12th International Conference on Hydroinformatics, HIC 2016Share
Metrics
Collections
- Artículos [19]
The following license files are associated with this item: