Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins

The main objective of this research is to evaluate the effects of climate change first on precipitation and temperature, and then on the runoff characteristics of two tropical watersheds located in Senegal and Guinea-Bissau. To achieve this, eighteen General Circulation Models (GCMs) were selected t...

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Main Authors: Sadio C.A.A.S., Faye C., Pande C.B., Tolche A.D., Ali M.S., Cabral-Pinto M.M.S., Elsahabi M.
Other Authors: 58237340000
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Published: Springer 2024
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spelling my.uniten.dspace-339412024-10-14T11:17:29Z Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins Sadio C.A.A.S. Faye C. Pande C.B. Tolche A.D. Ali M.S. Cabral-Pinto M.M.S. Elsahabi M. 58237340000 58614824600 57193547008 57198446685 55647599300 22133337700 57192111974 Casamance and Kayanga-G�va basins Climate change GR2M Hydrological projection Modelization SSP Casamance Guinea-Bissau Senegal Catchments Climate change Climate models Rivers Runoff Tropics Casamance and kayangum-geva basin Dry condition General circulation model GR2M Hydrological projection Modelization Multi-model ensemble River basins Shared socioeconomic pathway Socio-economics climate change general circulation model hydrological modeling river basin river flow runoff water supply Watersheds The main objective of this research is to evaluate the effects of climate change first on precipitation and temperature, and then on the runoff characteristics of two tropical watersheds located in Senegal and Guinea-Bissau. To achieve this, eighteen General Circulation Models (GCMs) were selected to measure various climate change scenarios under the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways�(SSP) SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5, using the reference period of 1985�2014. The GR2M hydrological model was employed to replicate past monthly surface runoff patterns for the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va watersheds. After calibrating and validating the GR2M model, the researchers simulated the predictable effect of climate change on the flow for the near future (2021�2040), medium future (2041�2060), and distant future (2081�2100) for each watershed, using the GCM multi-model ensemble mean. The quantile method was used to correct bias in temperature and precipitation data. The results of bias correction give a correlation coefficient greater than 0.9% for temperatures and 0,6% precipitation between the outputs of the multi-model ensemble and observations used. The results indicate also that all watersheds are expected to experience drier conditions in the near-future, mid-future, and far-future periods under both the SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5 scenarios. Furthermore, the predictable temperature trends consistently show a warmer situation with growing radiative making in the future times. However, the primary factor influencing changes in flow for all watersheds is the projected precipitation changes. The anticipated drier conditions in the near-future, mid-future, and far-future horizons under both scenarios would lead to significantly reduced runoff volumes at the beginning and middle of the rainy season. Consequently, the projected seasonal changes in river flow for all catchments (e.g., under SSP5-8.5 scenario, a decline of -34.47%, -56.01%, and -68.01% was noted, respectively, for the horizons 2050, 2070, and 2090 for the Casamance basin) could lead to new frequent occurrences of drought and water scarcity associated with past hydrological regimes. These scenarios enhance the necessity of improving water management, water prizing, and water recycling policies, to ensure water supply and to reduce tensions among regions and countries. � 2023, The Author(s). Final 2024-10-14T03:17:29Z 2024-10-14T03:17:29Z 2023 Article 10.1186/s12302-023-00822-4 2-s2.0-85179842733 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85179842733&doi=10.1186%2fs12302-023-00822-4&partnerID=40&md5=4a6dbdb63891fc5715588bbb3593b983 https://irepository.uniten.edu.my/handle/123456789/33941 35 1 113 All Open Access Gold Open Access Springer Scopus
institution Universiti Tenaga Nasional
building UNITEN Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tenaga Nasional
content_source UNITEN Institutional Repository
url_provider http://dspace.uniten.edu.my/
topic Casamance and Kayanga-G�va basins
Climate change
GR2M
Hydrological projection
Modelization
SSP
Casamance
Guinea-Bissau
Senegal
Catchments
Climate change
Climate models
Rivers
Runoff
Tropics
Casamance and kayangum-geva basin
Dry condition
General circulation model
GR2M
Hydrological projection
Modelization
Multi-model ensemble
River basins
Shared socioeconomic pathway
Socio-economics
climate change
general circulation model
hydrological modeling
river basin
river flow
runoff
water supply
Watersheds
spellingShingle Casamance and Kayanga-G�va basins
Climate change
GR2M
Hydrological projection
Modelization
SSP
Casamance
Guinea-Bissau
Senegal
Catchments
Climate change
Climate models
Rivers
Runoff
Tropics
Casamance and kayangum-geva basin
Dry condition
General circulation model
GR2M
Hydrological projection
Modelization
Multi-model ensemble
River basins
Shared socioeconomic pathway
Socio-economics
climate change
general circulation model
hydrological modeling
river basin
river flow
runoff
water supply
Watersheds
Sadio C.A.A.S.
Faye C.
Pande C.B.
Tolche A.D.
Ali M.S.
Cabral-Pinto M.M.S.
Elsahabi M.
Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
description The main objective of this research is to evaluate the effects of climate change first on precipitation and temperature, and then on the runoff characteristics of two tropical watersheds located in Senegal and Guinea-Bissau. To achieve this, eighteen General Circulation Models (GCMs) were selected to measure various climate change scenarios under the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways�(SSP) SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5, using the reference period of 1985�2014. The GR2M hydrological model was employed to replicate past monthly surface runoff patterns for the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va watersheds. After calibrating and validating the GR2M model, the researchers simulated the predictable effect of climate change on the flow for the near future (2021�2040), medium future (2041�2060), and distant future (2081�2100) for each watershed, using the GCM multi-model ensemble mean. The quantile method was used to correct bias in temperature and precipitation data. The results of bias correction give a correlation coefficient greater than 0.9% for temperatures and 0,6% precipitation between the outputs of the multi-model ensemble and observations used. The results indicate also that all watersheds are expected to experience drier conditions in the near-future, mid-future, and far-future periods under both the SSP1-2.6 and SSP5-8.5 scenarios. Furthermore, the predictable temperature trends consistently show a warmer situation with growing radiative making in the future times. However, the primary factor influencing changes in flow for all watersheds is the projected precipitation changes. The anticipated drier conditions in the near-future, mid-future, and far-future horizons under both scenarios would lead to significantly reduced runoff volumes at the beginning and middle of the rainy season. Consequently, the projected seasonal changes in river flow for all catchments (e.g., under SSP5-8.5 scenario, a decline of -34.47%, -56.01%, and -68.01% was noted, respectively, for the horizons 2050, 2070, and 2090 for the Casamance basin) could lead to new frequent occurrences of drought and water scarcity associated with past hydrological regimes. These scenarios enhance the necessity of improving water management, water prizing, and water recycling policies, to ensure water supply and to reduce tensions among regions and countries. � 2023, The Author(s).
author2 58237340000
author_facet 58237340000
Sadio C.A.A.S.
Faye C.
Pande C.B.
Tolche A.D.
Ali M.S.
Cabral-Pinto M.M.S.
Elsahabi M.
format Article
author Sadio C.A.A.S.
Faye C.
Pande C.B.
Tolche A.D.
Ali M.S.
Cabral-Pinto M.M.S.
Elsahabi M.
author_sort Sadio C.A.A.S.
title Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
title_short Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
title_full Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
title_fullStr Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
title_full_unstemmed Hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the GR2M model: the case of the Casamance and Kayanga-G�va rivers basins
title_sort hydrological response of tropical rivers basins to climate change using the gr2m model: the case of the casamance and kayanga-g�va rivers basins
publisher Springer
publishDate 2024
_version_ 1814061033837297664
score 13.214268