Properties of Hydrologic Cycle in Catchments in Different Land Use and Runoff Analysis by a Lumped Parametric Model

  • Takase, Keiji (Dept. of Rural Environmental Engrg., Ehime University)
  • Published : 2000.05.01

Abstract

In this paper, properties of hydrologic cycle in three experimental catchments were compared and different types of a lumped parametric model were applied to understand the hydrologic cycle in the catchments. One of them is a forest catchment and another one includes the reclained upland fields and last one does terraces paddy fields. The comparison of hydrologic properties showed that the differences in land used have great influences on the soil properties of surface layer, which cause changes in hydrologic processes such as evapotranspiration and storm runoff et.al. By the runoff analysis models, good agreements between observed and calculated discharge from the catchments were obtained and it was found that the differences in values of optimized model parameters and water budget components reflect those in the hydrologic cycle among them.

Keywords

References

  1. Water Resources Reseach v.18 no.3 Streamflow changes after logging 130-year-old Douglas fir in two small watersheds R. Dennis Harr;A. Levno; R. Mersereau
  2. Bulletin of the Kyoto University Forest v.57 Hydrologic cycle model for mountain waterhed and its application to the continues 10years records at intervals for both a day and an hour of Kiryu Watershed, Siga Prefecture Y. Fukushima;M. Suzuki
  3. Docter Thesis of the United Graduate School of Ehime Universuty Characteristics of Discharge and Water Quality from an Experimental Catchment Including Terraced Paddy Fields L. Hong
  4. Transaction of the Japanese Society of Irrigation, Drainage and Reclamation Engineering(JSIDRE) v.65 Search for the Coefficients of the Reservoir Model with the Powells Confugate Direction Method S. Kobayashi;T. Maruyama
  5. Report of grant-in-aid for scientific research Change of hydrologic cycle due to reclamation of farm land T. Maruyama
  6. Journal of Japan Scoiety of Hydrology and Water Resources v.7 no.6 Comparison of Evapotranspiration between a Reclaimed Upland Field and a Forest Catchment K. Takase