4.7 Article

A Stream Water Availability Model of Upper Indus Basin Based on a Topologic Model and Global Climatic Datasets

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WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT
卷 24, 期 15, 页码 4403-4443

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11269-010-9666-0

关键词

Indus River; Upper Indus basin; Snowmelt hydrology; Water availability model; Climate change effects on hydrology

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Integrated water resources management at river basin scales and evaluation of effects of climate change on regional water resources require quantitative estimates of space-time variability of monthly discharges within a river network This study demonstrates that such estimates, which can be called stream water availability, for regional river basins with meager or nonexistent gauge data, can be obtained by combining continuity mode Is of hydrological processes, flow routing, and topology of the river basin The hydrologic processes can be adequately modeled using high quality databases of hydrologic significance A stream water availability model is presented for Upper Indus Basin (UIB) utilizing the most up-to-date datasets for topography, temperature, precipitation, net radiation, land cover, soil type, and digital atlas Multiple datasets have been evaluated and the ones with best accuracy and temporal coverage have been selected for the final model Upper Indus River and its major tributaries are highly significant in regional water resources management and geopolitics However, UIB is a poorly studied and largely ungauged river basin with an area of 265,598 km(2) and extremely rugged topography Several factors, the chief ones being the challenging terrain and the trans-boundary nature of the basin, have contributed to this knowledge gap Hydro-climatologically it is a complex basin with a significant cryospheric component The spatial and temporal variation of the principal climatic variable,, namely precipitation, net radiation, and temperature has been thoroughly accounted for in the development of a stream water availability model based on a process model coupled with a topologic model and a linear reservoir model of river flow routing Model calculations indicate that there are essentially two hydrologic regimes in UIB The regime that is truly significant in contributing stream flows, originates from the UIB cryosphere containing outstanding glaciers and snowfields The other regime, generated from wet precipitation and melt water from seasonal snow covers is insignificant due to high rates of infiltration and evaporation in the semi-desert environment prevailing at elevations below perennial snow and ice covers In general, the modeled stream flow characteristics match with the sparse discharge measurements that are available Flow in the Indus considerably increases at its confluence with Shyok River and further downstream where other tributaries from the north join the main stem At or near the outlet of the basin stream flow can vary from less than 800 m(3) s(-1) in the winter and spring to nearly 8 000 m(3) s(-1) the peak summer and can persist to over 1,500 m(3) s(-1) in the autumn The importance of snow and glacial melt in Indus River discharge is apparent and any global or regional climate change affecting the equilibrium line elevation of the snow fields in the Karakoram will have a profound influence on the water availability in the Indus Estimates are made for per capita water availability in Ladakh and Gilgit-Baltistan territories, controlled by India and Pakistan respectively Geopolitical significance and climate change effects are discussed briefly

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