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Multi-gauge calibration comparison for simulating streamflow across the Major River Basins in Madagascar: SWAT + Toolbox, R-SWAT, and SWAT + Editor Hard calibration

Authors

Harifidy,  Rakotoarimanana Zy
External Organizations;

Hiroshi,  Ishidaira
External Organizations;

Kazuyoshi,  Souma
External Organizations;

Jun,  Magome
External Organizations;

Harivelo,  Rakotoarimanana Zy Misa
External Organizations;

/persons/resource/fernandez.carlos

Fernandez Palomino,  Carlos Antonio
Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research;

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Fulltext (public)

29736oa.pdf
(Publisher version), 2MB

Supplementary Material (public)

nh2024188supp1.pdf
(Supplementary material), 2MB

Citation

Harifidy, R. Z., Hiroshi, I., Kazuyoshi, S., Jun, M., Harivelo, R. Z. M., Fernandez Palomino, C. A. (2024): Multi-gauge calibration comparison for simulating streamflow across the Major River Basins in Madagascar: SWAT + Toolbox, R-SWAT, and SWAT + Editor Hard calibration. - Hydrology Research, 55, 3, 412-430.
https://doi.org/10.2166/nh.2024.188


Cite as: https://publications.pik-potsdam.de/pubman/item/item_29736
Abstract
This paper aims to improve the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model performance across the Major River Basins in Madagascar (MRBM), specifically for SWAT simulation in the Manambolo, Onilahy, Mananara, and Mandrare basins. A multi-gauge calibration was carried out to compare the performance of SWAT+ Toolbox, and R-SWAT, SWAT+ Editor Hard calibration on a monthly time step for the periods 1982–1999. We found that the SWAT+ model generated greater surface runoff, while the SWAT model resulted in higher groundwater flow in both CSFR and CHIRPS datasets. It has been demonstrated that the SWAT+ Toolbox had more potential in calibrating runoff across the MRBM compared to R-SWAT. Calibration in both methods led to a reduction in surface runoff, percolation, water yield, and curve number but increased the lateral flow, evapotranspiration (ET), and groundwater flow. The results showed that the multi-gauge calibrations did not significantly enhance simulation performance in the MRBM compared to single-site calibration. The performance of the SWAT+ model for runoff simulation within the SWAT+ Toolbox and R-SWAT was unsatisfactory for most basins (NSE < 0) except for Betsiboka, Mahavavy, Tsiribihina, Mangoro, and Mangoky basins (NSE = 0.40–0.70; R2 = 0.45–0.80, PBIAS≤ ±25), whether considering the CHIRPS or CSFR datasets. Further study is still required to address this issue.