Post on 18-Dec-2015
Configuring the ACRU model
Andy Pike
School of Bioresources Engineering and Environmental Hydrology.
University of Natal, Pietermaritzburg.
STEP 1: Define the Problem
The configuration will be determined by the problem at hand
Try and foresee the questions that might be asked in the future to pre-empt a further configuration at a later stage
STEP 2: Fieldwork
Fieldwork is essential to account for changes in land cover and catchment development which are not reflected in the traditional information sources
Field visits can often give the modeller an idea of the hydrological responses of the various subcatchments
STEP 3: Delimit theSubcatchments (1 of 4)
Catchment boundaries should be natural watersheds and should account for the following features:– Special points of interest
Abstraction points, effluent/irrigation return flows, point sources of pollution, water treatment plants, IFR sites
STEP 3: Delimit theSubcatchments (2 of 4)
– Soils Exposed rock, highly eroded areas, water repellant soils
(hydrophobic soils), geology
– Land cover Wetlands, commercial and indigenous forests, land
cover in pristine condition Agricultural areas
– irrigated and dryland cultivation, intensive/commercial agriculture, subsistence agriculture
STEP 3: Delimit theSubcatchments (3 of 4)
– Rainfall Catchments can be divided when a large variation in
Mean Annual Precipitation is evident
– Topography slope altitude
– Impoundments Major dams should always be at the outlet of a
subcatchment
STEP 3: Delimit theSubcatchments (4 of 4)
– Gauging stations and weirs These need to be at the outlet of subcatchments in
order for the simulated streamflows to be compared to observed data
STEP 4: Digitise and Number (1 of 3)
The subcatchment boundaries need to be digitised accurately and the areas need to be determined in km2
Each subcatchment should be numbered in sequential order from the sources to the mouth– These numbers should be entered as a new field
in the attribute table of the Shapefile
STEP 4: Digitise and Number (2 of 3)
(from page AT2-13 of the ACRU Theory Manual)
STEP 4: Digitise and Number (3 of 3)
A utility (CreateMenuFromGIS) is available from the School of Bioresources Engineering and Environmental Hydrology to assist the users in configuration of catchments from ArcView
(see http://www.beeh.unp.ac.za/pike/fortran/fortran_main.htm)
STEP 5: Rainfall
Selection of appropriate “Driver” rainfall stations– Identify all rainfall stations in the immediate area– Select the most appropriate “driver” station for each subcatchment (based
on years of record, MAP, altitude, distance away from the subcatchment)– Infil missing records and make sure that they form concurrent periods– Check for problems of “phasing”– Calculate adjustment factors from catchment and station median monthly
rainfall in order that the point rainfall data are more representative of the catchment’s rainfall
A utility (CALC_PPTCOR) is available from the School of Bioresources Engineering and Environmental Hydrology to assist the users in this process
(see http://www.beeh.unp.ac.za/pike/fortran/fortran_main.htm)
STEP 6: Other Climate Information
Mean monthly A-pan data Median monthly maximum and minimum
temperatures Daily maximum and minimum temperature
data
STEP 7: Soils Information
Sources:– ISCW Land Type Database– SIRI 84 Homogeneous Soil Zones– ARC Biotopes
A utility (AutoSoils) which automatically assigns soil water retention and drainage characteristics to each ISCW Land Type is available from the School of Bioresources Engineering and Environmental Hydrology
STEP 8: Landuse Information
Sources:– Acocks’ Veld Types (follow “Tips and Tricks” link from
http://www.beeh.unp.ac.za/acru/)– CSIR (Environmentek) National Land Cover (NLC)
Database (click icons below)
NLC1994/1995 NLC2000
STEP 9: Streamflow/RunoffInformation
The following variables and parameters control the generation and timing streamflow:
– stormflow response fraction for the catchment/subcatchment (QFRESP)
– coefficient of baseflow response (COFRU)– effective (critical) depth of the soil (m) from which stormflow
generation takes place (SMDDEP)
– option to include or exclude baseflow from the simulation of streamflow (IRUN)
– fraction of the catchment occupied by adjunct impervious areas (ADJIMP)
– fraction of the catchment occupied by impervious areas which are not adjacent to a watercourse (DISIMP)
– surface storage capacity (i.e. depression storage, or initial abstraction) of impervious surface (STOIMP)
– option to simulate the water budget of an internally drained area (LYSIM)
– coefficient of initial abstraction (COIAM)
STEP 10: Irrigation Information
Requirements:– Areas irrigated– Months during which irrigation occurs– Application rates and modes of scheduling
(amounts and cycles)– Crop irrigated and their growth characteristics
STEP 11: Abstractions
Volumes and timing Source (run-of-river or impoundment) Return flows
STEP 12: Impoundments
Surface area Volume “Internal” (farm dams) or “external” Environmental flow releases, legal flows and
seepage Evaporation
STEP 13: Verifications
Comparison of simulated flows to observed data (daily, monthly or annual)
Use:– Regression and comparative statistics– Time series plots– 1:1 plots– Double mass plots
STEP 14: Scenarios
Evaluate the impacts of changes in:– land cover– land use and management– operating rules– optimisation of irrigation scheduling– optimisation of dam sizing
Consult the ACRU Homepage for further information
http://www.beeh.unp.ac.za/acru