Comparison of three coarsening methods of gridded digital elevation
models by ParFlow.CLM in a typical karstic basin of Central China
Abstract
Extraction of critical hydrologic features from high-resolution
topographic data is challenging using existing grid coarsening
approaches, such as surface flow path, river network, and slope, which
limits the application of hydrological models. In this research, the
influence of various grid coarsening techniques on the prediction
outcomes was measured by a numerical experiment based on the integrated
hydrological model ParFlow-Common Land Model (ParFlow.CLM). Three grid
coarsening methods (Nearest Neighbor Coarsening, Majority Coarsening,
Hydrography-Driven Coarsening) were applied to simulate
evapotranspiration(E), soil temperature(ST), streamflow, soil
moisture(SM) and latent(LE) heat fluxes in central China’s Sixi Valley,
a classic example of a karstic basin. As a result, the three grid
coarsening methods perform uniform in simulating latent heat fluxes and
soil temperature. However, their ability to predict soil moisture
surface flow and evapotranspiration are more diverging. The
hydrography-driven coarsening extracts significantly more accurate
valleys, rivers network, and slopes closer to the actual terrain than
existing coarsening strategies. Slopes derived from hydrography-driven
coarsening methods can be used to predict more accurately the top soil
moisture, evapotranspiration, and streamflow dynamics processes. This
study stresses that a hydrography-driven coarsening strategy is
advocated for all those cases in which topographic slope extracted using
a coarse-grid digital elevation model is an important influence on the
ParFlow.CLM simulation of essential hydrographic features.