ASSESSMENT OF WATER BALANCES USING SWAT MODEL AND AGRICULTURAL WATER DEMAND ANALYSIS OF GIDABO RIVER CATCHMENT, RIFT VALLEY BASIN, ETHIOPIA
No Thumbnail Available
Date
2020-07-18
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Hawassa University
Abstract
To use water resources sustainably, it is important to understand the quantity of water resource
spatially and temporally. The work presented here attempts to model water balance of one of Gidabo
sub-watershed of Ethiopian Rift Valley Basin using the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT.
Statistical model performance measures, the coefficient of determination (R2
) and Nash-Sutcliffe
Efficiency (NSE) were used to evaluate the correlation between the observed and simulated monthly
stream flow. The result shows an acceptable performance of SWAT model in simulating the
watershed hydrology as evidenced by the NSE value of 0.79 and R2 value of 0.80 at calibration
(using data from1990-2009) and NSE = 0.71 and R2
=0.82 at validation (using data from2010-
2014). In terms of water balance components, the long-term annual precipitation is found to be in
the magnitude of 1435.58 mm; whereas the surface runoff; total water yield; and actual
evapotranspiration, are estimated as 62.20; 1189.73, and 228.40 mm respectively. In order to link
the water balance estimation with the local agricultural water demand, wheat and potato are
selected for they are common crops for irrigation in the watershed. While taking the month of
March, which is the month of maximum agricultural water demand (11.6 m
3
/s), the watershed is
found to be water-surplus as indicated by the water availability of the critical month (12.22 m3
/s) to
be higher than the demand. This research implies that the use of models in supporting decisions
related to water resources development and management is paramount important to understand how
the system functions
Description
Keywords
Agricultural water requirements, Gidabo watershed, SWAT model, Water balance
