Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection

Although the annual rainfall in Taiwan is high, water shortages still occasionally occur owing to its nonuniform temporal and spatial distribution. At these times, the groundwater is considered an acceptable alternative water source. Groundwater is of particular value because it is considered a clea...

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Main Authors: Jing-Ying Huang, Dong-Sin Shih
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/24/8882
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author Jing-Ying Huang
Dong-Sin Shih
author_facet Jing-Ying Huang
Dong-Sin Shih
author_sort Jing-Ying Huang
collection DOAJ
description Although the annual rainfall in Taiwan is high, water shortages still occasionally occur owing to its nonuniform temporal and spatial distribution. At these times, the groundwater is considered an acceptable alternative water source. Groundwater is of particular value because it is considered a clean and reliable source of fresh water. To prevent water scarcity, this study utilized seasonal forecasting by incorporating hydrological models to evaluate the seasonal groundwater level. The seasonal prospective issued by the Central Weather Bureau of Taiwan (CWB) was combined with weather generator data to construct seasonal weather forecasts as the input for hydrological models. A rainfall-runoff model, HEC-HMS, and a coupled groundwater and surface water model, WASH123D, were applied to simulate the seasonal groundwater levels. The Fengshan Creek basin in northern Taiwan was selected as a study site to test the proposed approach. The simulations demonstrated stability and feasibility, and the results agreed with the observed groundwater table. The calibrations indicated that the average errors of river stage were 0.850 for <i>R<sup>2</sup></i>, 0.279 for root-mean-square error (RMSE), and 0.824 for efficiency coefficient (CE). The simulation also revealed that the simulated groundwater table corresponded with observed hydrographs very well (<i>R<sup>2</sup></i> of 0.607, RMSE of 0.282 m, and CE of 0.621). The parameters were verified in this study, and they were deemed practical and adequate for subsequent seasonal assessment. The seasonal forecast of 2018 at Guanxi station indicated that the 25th and 75th percentiles of simulated annual rainfall were within 1921–3285 mm and the actual annual rainfall was 2031 mm. Its seasonal rainfall outlook was around 30% accurate for forecasts of three consecutive months in 2018. Similarly, at Xinpu station, its seasonal rainfall outlook was about 40% accurate, and the amount of annual rainfall (1295 mm) was within the range of the 25th and 75th percentiles (1193–1852 mm). This revealed that the actual annual precipitations at both Guanxi and Xinpu station corresponded with the range of 25th and 75th percentiles of simulated rainfall, even if the accurate rate for the 3 month seasonal forecast had some error. The subsequent groundwater simulations were overestimated because the amount of actual rainfall was far lower than the average of the historical record in some dry season months. However, the amount of rainfall returned to normal values during the wet seasons, where the seasonal forecast and observation results were similar.
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spelling doaj.art-c2016093007b491088e289d1214e09072023-11-21T00:29:51ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-12-011024888210.3390/app10248882Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling ProjectionJing-Ying Huang0Dong-Sin Shih1Department of Civil Engineering, National Chung Hsing University, Taichung City 402, TaiwanDepartment of Civil Engineering, National Chiao Tung University, Hsinchu City 300, TaiwanAlthough the annual rainfall in Taiwan is high, water shortages still occasionally occur owing to its nonuniform temporal and spatial distribution. At these times, the groundwater is considered an acceptable alternative water source. Groundwater is of particular value because it is considered a clean and reliable source of fresh water. To prevent water scarcity, this study utilized seasonal forecasting by incorporating hydrological models to evaluate the seasonal groundwater level. The seasonal prospective issued by the Central Weather Bureau of Taiwan (CWB) was combined with weather generator data to construct seasonal weather forecasts as the input for hydrological models. A rainfall-runoff model, HEC-HMS, and a coupled groundwater and surface water model, WASH123D, were applied to simulate the seasonal groundwater levels. The Fengshan Creek basin in northern Taiwan was selected as a study site to test the proposed approach. The simulations demonstrated stability and feasibility, and the results agreed with the observed groundwater table. The calibrations indicated that the average errors of river stage were 0.850 for <i>R<sup>2</sup></i>, 0.279 for root-mean-square error (RMSE), and 0.824 for efficiency coefficient (CE). The simulation also revealed that the simulated groundwater table corresponded with observed hydrographs very well (<i>R<sup>2</sup></i> of 0.607, RMSE of 0.282 m, and CE of 0.621). The parameters were verified in this study, and they were deemed practical and adequate for subsequent seasonal assessment. The seasonal forecast of 2018 at Guanxi station indicated that the 25th and 75th percentiles of simulated annual rainfall were within 1921–3285 mm and the actual annual rainfall was 2031 mm. Its seasonal rainfall outlook was around 30% accurate for forecasts of three consecutive months in 2018. Similarly, at Xinpu station, its seasonal rainfall outlook was about 40% accurate, and the amount of annual rainfall (1295 mm) was within the range of the 25th and 75th percentiles (1193–1852 mm). This revealed that the actual annual precipitations at both Guanxi and Xinpu station corresponded with the range of 25th and 75th percentiles of simulated rainfall, even if the accurate rate for the 3 month seasonal forecast had some error. The subsequent groundwater simulations were overestimated because the amount of actual rainfall was far lower than the average of the historical record in some dry season months. However, the amount of rainfall returned to normal values during the wet seasons, where the seasonal forecast and observation results were similar.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/24/8882unified seasonal outlookWASH123Dgroundwater levelrainfall forecastinghydrological modeling
spellingShingle Jing-Ying Huang
Dong-Sin Shih
Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
Applied Sciences
unified seasonal outlook
WASH123D
groundwater level
rainfall forecasting
hydrological modeling
title Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
title_full Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
title_fullStr Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
title_short Assessing Groundwater Level with a Unified Seasonal Outlook and Hydrological Modeling Projection
title_sort assessing groundwater level with a unified seasonal outlook and hydrological modeling projection
topic unified seasonal outlook
WASH123D
groundwater level
rainfall forecasting
hydrological modeling
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/24/8882
work_keys_str_mv AT jingyinghuang assessinggroundwaterlevelwithaunifiedseasonaloutlookandhydrologicalmodelingprojection
AT dongsinshih assessinggroundwaterlevelwithaunifiedseasonaloutlookandhydrologicalmodelingprojection