Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model. / Hansen, Anne Lausten; Refsgaard, Jens Christian; Christensen, Britt Stenhøj Baun; Jensen, Karsten Høgh.

In: Water Resources Research, Vol. 49, No. 1, 2013, p. 585-603.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Hansen, AL, Refsgaard, JC, Christensen, BSB & Jensen, KH 2013, 'Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model', Water Resources Research, vol. 49, no. 1, pp. 585-603. https://doi.org/10.1029/2011WR011783

APA

Hansen, A. L., Refsgaard, J. C., Christensen, B. S. B., & Jensen, K. H. (2013). Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model. Water Resources Research, 49(1), 585-603. https://doi.org/10.1029/2011WR011783

Vancouver

Hansen AL, Refsgaard JC, Christensen BSB, Jensen KH. Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model. Water Resources Research. 2013;49(1):585-603. https://doi.org/10.1029/2011WR011783

Author

Hansen, Anne Lausten ; Refsgaard, Jens Christian ; Christensen, Britt Stenhøj Baun ; Jensen, Karsten Høgh. / Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model. In: Water Resources Research. 2013 ; Vol. 49, No. 1. pp. 585-603.

Bibtex

@article{9d033d2c4fad4f1d946dba2e39ff5e3c,
title = "Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model",
abstract = "To use a catchment-scale model to delineate areas with high and low denitrification capacities in the saturated zone of a catchment, the model must have an accurate spatial description of both general large-scale flow patterns on catchment scale and small-scale flow patterns locally within the catchment. In this study, a coupled groundwater-surface water model based on the MIKE SHE code was developed for the 4.7 km2 Lilleb{\ae}k catchment in Denmark, where tile drain flow is a major contributor to the stream discharge. The catchment model was calibrated in several steps by incrementally including the observation data into the calibration to see the effect on model performance of including diverse data types, especially tile drain discharge. For the Lilleb{\ae}k catchment, measurements of hydraulic head, daily stream discharge, and daily tile drain discharge from five small (1–4 ha) drainage areas exist. The results showed that including tile drain data in the calibration of the catchment model improved its general performance for hydraulic heads and stream discharges. However, the model failed to correctly describe the local-scale dynamics of the tile drain discharges, and, furthermore, including the drain data in the calibration did not improve the small-scale spatial dynamics. This is mainly believed to be caused by the model's inadequate simulation of local spatial dynamics in hydraulic heads, which we argue is likely due to the lack of sufficient heterogeneity in the geological model.",
author = "Hansen, {Anne Lausten} and Refsgaard, {Jens Christian} and Christensen, {Britt Stenh{\o}j Baun} and Jensen, {Karsten H{\o}gh}",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.1029/2011WR011783",
language = "English",
volume = "49",
pages = "585--603",
journal = "Water Resources Research",
issn = "0043-1397",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Importance of including small-scale tile drain discharge in the calibration of a coupled groundwater-surface water catchment model

AU - Hansen, Anne Lausten

AU - Refsgaard, Jens Christian

AU - Christensen, Britt Stenhøj Baun

AU - Jensen, Karsten Høgh

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - To use a catchment-scale model to delineate areas with high and low denitrification capacities in the saturated zone of a catchment, the model must have an accurate spatial description of both general large-scale flow patterns on catchment scale and small-scale flow patterns locally within the catchment. In this study, a coupled groundwater-surface water model based on the MIKE SHE code was developed for the 4.7 km2 Lillebæk catchment in Denmark, where tile drain flow is a major contributor to the stream discharge. The catchment model was calibrated in several steps by incrementally including the observation data into the calibration to see the effect on model performance of including diverse data types, especially tile drain discharge. For the Lillebæk catchment, measurements of hydraulic head, daily stream discharge, and daily tile drain discharge from five small (1–4 ha) drainage areas exist. The results showed that including tile drain data in the calibration of the catchment model improved its general performance for hydraulic heads and stream discharges. However, the model failed to correctly describe the local-scale dynamics of the tile drain discharges, and, furthermore, including the drain data in the calibration did not improve the small-scale spatial dynamics. This is mainly believed to be caused by the model's inadequate simulation of local spatial dynamics in hydraulic heads, which we argue is likely due to the lack of sufficient heterogeneity in the geological model.

AB - To use a catchment-scale model to delineate areas with high and low denitrification capacities in the saturated zone of a catchment, the model must have an accurate spatial description of both general large-scale flow patterns on catchment scale and small-scale flow patterns locally within the catchment. In this study, a coupled groundwater-surface water model based on the MIKE SHE code was developed for the 4.7 km2 Lillebæk catchment in Denmark, where tile drain flow is a major contributor to the stream discharge. The catchment model was calibrated in several steps by incrementally including the observation data into the calibration to see the effect on model performance of including diverse data types, especially tile drain discharge. For the Lillebæk catchment, measurements of hydraulic head, daily stream discharge, and daily tile drain discharge from five small (1–4 ha) drainage areas exist. The results showed that including tile drain data in the calibration of the catchment model improved its general performance for hydraulic heads and stream discharges. However, the model failed to correctly describe the local-scale dynamics of the tile drain discharges, and, furthermore, including the drain data in the calibration did not improve the small-scale spatial dynamics. This is mainly believed to be caused by the model's inadequate simulation of local spatial dynamics in hydraulic heads, which we argue is likely due to the lack of sufficient heterogeneity in the geological model.

U2 - 10.1029/2011WR011783

DO - 10.1029/2011WR011783

M3 - Journal article

VL - 49

SP - 585

EP - 603

JO - Water Resources Research

JF - Water Resources Research

SN - 0043-1397

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 47086394