dc.description.abstract |
Drought is an creeping hazard that is least understood and the most complex of all-natural
hazards. The drought study requires large historical climatological and meteorological datasets
and their complex inter-relationships. Its impacts are prominently observed on a local scale
only when the severity becomes high, and the coherent onset and persistence of mild droughts
may go unnoticed. The current study investigates the existing drought conditions and future
drought risk in the Maduru Oya River Basin over the 21
st
-century in terms of meteorological
and hydrological drought indices (i.e., SPI, SPEI, RDI, EDI and SRI). The future hydrology
over the basin is simulated for this research, using bias-corrected precipitation and potential
evapotranspiration outputs under RCP 4.5 and 8.5 of the MPI-M-MPI-ESM-MR. The relevant
drought-related indices were computed in monthly and seasonal timescales over the 19512099
period. The time series have been classified for drought characterization, including
drought frequency, severity, trend, and probability computation. Further, to assess the impact
of these droughts on the basin's response, a hydrological model (i.e., HEC-HMS) was
developed to simulate the discharge at the Padiyathalawa outlet considering 2008-2012 as
validation period.
The results of the monthly timescale for SPI (approximately similar drought frequency and
severity by RDI and EDI) depicted that the severe and extreme droughts (45) occurred in
March (8), August (5), September (4), October (6) and November (9) in the historical period.
Severe and extreme droughts (110 under RCP 4.5,104 under RCP 8.5) are projected in January
(17), February (12), April (10), May (12) and December (13) under RCP 4.5 and January (12),
February (10), April (13), June (13) and August (10) under RCP 8.5 over the 21
-century. The
SPEI at monthly timescale identified highest number of severe and extreme drought (67)
events in the historical period and projected highest severe and extreme drought (128 under
RCP 4.5,122 under RCP 8.5) events over the 21
st
-century in the study area. The hydrological
drought index, SRI projected severe and extreme droughts under RCP 4.5 (65) and RCP 8.5
(62) over the 21
st
-century that is about 50 % frequency of the meteorological drought indices.
The Northeast Monsoon season had the least drought episodes (~20) in the historical period,
and on a seasonal time scale, high drought frequency (~30 using meteorological drought
indices and ~20 using SRI under RCP 4.5 and RCP 8.5) and severity(severe and extreme
droughts) are projected in the Northeast Monsoon. It is also observed that there is a consistent
mild drought throughout the mid (~70) and end (~65) century for a maximum duration
compared to the historical (~50) period. The accuracy of results obtained from the continuous
HEC-HMS model (NSE, RMSE Std. Dev, and R
2
st
values of 0.59, 0.72, and 0.60 achieved in
validation)highlights the efficient way to simulate a basin's hydrological parameters. The
model can project the future variation of streamflow of the Maduru Oya River Basin under
varied climatic conditions. The discharge is projected to have a decreasing trend (Sen’s slope=0.008)
for
future
years,
identified
as
droughts.
It
can
be
concluded
that
the
impact
of
climate
change
on
meteorological
drought
will
affect
the
discharge
of
the
basin.
Moreover,
due
to
time
lag
between
meteorological
and
hydrological
drought,
about
50
%
of
meteorological
droughts
may
lead
to
a
severe
and
extreme
hydrological
drought
in
the
Maduru
Oya
River
Basin
over
the
mid-century
(14)
under
RCP
8.5
and
end-century
(13)
under
RCP
4.5
scenarios.
This
study
will
begin
with
quantitative
investigations
including streamflow variability and climatology
over the basin incorporating the application of regional circulation models. |
en_US |