4.7 Article

Combination of lumped hydrological and remote-sensing models to evaluate water resources in a semi-arid high altitude ungauged watershed of Sierra Nevada (Southern Spain)

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 625, Issue -, Pages 285-300

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.12.300

Keywords

Ungauged basins; Remote sensing; Vegetation indices; Evapotranspiration; Water resources management; HBV

Funding

  1. Geological Survey of Spain (IGME) [CANOA-73.3.00.47.00, 73.3.00.44.00]
  2. CONICYT of Chile [ACT-1203]
  3. Andalusian Government [RNM-126]

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Assessing water resources in high mountain semi-arid zones is essential to be able to manage and plan the use of these resources downstream where they are used. However, it is not easy to manage an unknown resource, a situation that is common in the vast majority of high mountain hydrological basins. In the present work, the discharge flow in an ungauged basin is estimated using the hydrological parameters of an HBV (Hydrologiska Byrans Vattenbalansavdelning) model calibrated in a neighboring gauged basin. The results of the hydrological simulation obtained in terms of average annual discharge are validated using the VI-ETo model. This model relates a simple hydrological balance to the discharge of the basin with the evaporation of the vegetal cover of the soil, and this to the SAVI index, which is obtained remotely by means of satellite images. The results of the modeling for both basins underscore the role of the underground discharge in the total discharge of the hydrological system. This is the result of the deglaciation process suffered by the high mountain areas of the Mediterranean arc. This process increases the infiltration capacity of the terrain, the recharge and therefore the discharge of the aquifers that make up the glacial and periglacial sediments that remain exposed on the surface as witnesses of what was the last glaciation. (c) 2017 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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