Citation
Nabi, Amjad
(1998)
A Hydrologic Model for Studying the Climate Change Impact on Evapotranspiration and Water Yield in a Humid Tropical Watershed.
PhD thesis, Universiti Putra Malaysia.
Abstract
A procedure for estimating the impact of CO2-induced climate and vegetation
changes on actual evapotranspiration (ET), soil moisture and water yield in a humidtropical
vegetated watershed was proposed and evaluated. A distributed parameter
modelling approach was used whereby a watershed was subdivided into relatively
homogeneous ground response units (GRUs) to provide distributed parameter
capabilities. A distributed parameter ET submodel was developed based on a
biophysical approach for simulating actual evapotranspiration from a watershed with
closed canopy cover of natural and planted vegetation. The hydrologic model, called
humid tropical vegetation climate hydrologic model (HTVCHM), was developed by
incorporating this ET submodel. Leaf area index (LA!) was used in the model as a measure of vegetation structure
and to quantify energy and mass exchange of canopies. The potentials of Landsat TM
image was studied for LA! estimation using vegetation-index (VI) of rainforest, rubber
and oil palm plantation. Canopy conductance (reciprocal of resistance) was also an
important vegetative parameter which was included to represent CO2-induced changes
in vegetation. A procedure was presented and evaluated for subdividing a watershed into
GRUs through the application of an unsupervised pattern recognition algorithm in
conjunction with topographic data to Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM) data in a GIS
environment.
To conduct the sensitivity analyses, climate and vegetation change scenarios
were proposed based on the GCM prediction for this region and information from the
literature. The procedure developed in this research is an effective and practical
integrated approach to modelling the effects of climate and vegetation changes on the hydrologic response of watershed in this region. This procedure was applied and
evaluated on the Trolak watershed of the Bernam River basin with a wet humid tropical
climate and located in the south-east of Perak State of West Malaysia.
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