4.7 Article

Dynamically coupling system dynamics and SWAT plus models using Tinamit: application of modular tools for coupled human-water system models

Journal

HYDROLOGY AND EARTH SYSTEM SCIENCES
Volume 27, Issue 8, Pages 1683-1693

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/hess-27-1683-2023

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Participatory water resource management requires accurate, flexible, and stakeholder-friendly modeling techniques. System dynamics (SD) models have been widely used as a stakeholder-friendly approach, while physically based models like SWAT+ are used to model hydrological components. Model coupling combines the strengths of both paradigms, allowing the development of participatory SD models while delegating hydrological components to external models.
Participatory water resource management requires modeling techniques that are accurate and flexible yet stakeholder-friendly. While different modeling frameworks offer advantages and disadvantages, system dynamics (SDs) models have seen sustained use as a stakeholder-friendly approach for participatory water resource modeling. Physically based models (e.g., SWAT+) have seen sustained use to model the hydrological components of water systems. Proposed as a way to combine the relative strengths of both modeling paradigms, model coupling allows researchers to, for example, build participatory SD models with stakeholders, while delegating the hydrological components of the overall model to an external hydrological model. Recently developed to facilitate model coupling, the Tinamit Python package presents an extensible, outward-facing application programming interface (API). It allows for the development of extensions (wrappers) that expand compatibility with different physically based models. However, no watershed hydrological model has yet been connected to this API. In the present study, a socket and JavaScript Object Notation (JSON)-based communication protocol was developed with the goal of facilitating the coupling of models written in languages such as Fortran. This novel protocol served to develop a Tinamit-compatible wrapper for the hydrological model SWAT+, allowing it to be coupled to human-water SD models. The novel coupling protocol was then applied to a case study of Tanzania's Usa river catchment. This approach provides the modeler with the benefits of both physically based and SD models, thereby allowing the detection of potentially far-reaching effects of policy-makers ' decisions.

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