Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study

<p>Modern hydrology is embracing a data-intensive new era, with information from diverse sources currently providing support for hydrological inferences at broader scales. This results in a plethora of data-reliability-related challenges that remain unsolved. The water budget non-closure is a...

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Main Authors: X. Zheng, D. Liu, S. Huang, H. Wang, X. Meng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2025-02-01
Series:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/29/627/2025/hess-29-627-2025.pdf
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author X. Zheng
D. Liu
S. Huang
H. Wang
X. Meng
author_facet X. Zheng
D. Liu
S. Huang
H. Wang
X. Meng
author_sort X. Zheng
collection DOAJ
description <p>Modern hydrology is embracing a data-intensive new era, with information from diverse sources currently providing support for hydrological inferences at broader scales. This results in a plethora of data-reliability-related challenges that remain unsolved. The water budget non-closure is a widely reported phenomenon in hydrological and atmospheric systems. Many existing methods aim to enforce water budget closure constraints through data fusion and bias correction approaches, often neglecting the physical interconnections between water budget components. To solve this problem, this study proposes a Multisource Dataset Correction Framework grounded in Physical Hydrological Process Modelling to enhance water budget closure, termed the PHPM-MDCF. The concept of decomposing the total water budget residuals into inconsistency and omission residuals is embedded in this framework to account for different residual sources. We examined the efficiency of the PHPM-MDCF and the distribution of residuals across 475 contiguous United States (CONUS) basins selected by hydrological simulation reliability. The results indicate that the inconsistency residuals dominate the total water budget residuals, exhibiting highly consistent spatiotemporal patterns. This portion of residuals can be significantly reduced through PHPM-MDCF correction and achieved satisfactory efficiency. The total water budget residuals decreased by 49 %, on average, across all basins, with reductions exceeding 80 % in certain basins. The credibility of the correction framework was further verified through noise experiments and comparisons with existing methods. In the end, we explored the potential factors influencing the distribution of residuals and found notable scale effects, along with the key role of hydro-meteorological conditions. This emphasizes the importance of carefully evaluating the water balance assumption when employing multisource datasets for hydrological inference in small and humid basins.</p>
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spelling doaj-art-4e8aa15ab5404a6abe594285ef8c98ca2025-02-04T10:32:17ZengCopernicus PublicationsHydrology and Earth System Sciences1027-56061607-79382025-02-012962765310.5194/hess-29-627-2025Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample studyX. Zheng0D. Liu1S. Huang2H. Wang3X. Meng4State Key Laboratory of Eco-hydraulics in Northwest Arid Region of China, School of Water Resources and Hydropower, Xi'an University of Technology, Xi'an, 710048, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Eco-hydraulics in Northwest Arid Region of China, School of Water Resources and Hydropower, Xi'an University of Technology, Xi'an, 710048, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Eco-hydraulics in Northwest Arid Region of China, School of Water Resources and Hydropower, Xi'an University of Technology, Xi'an, 710048, ChinaState Key Laboratory of Simulation and Regulation of Water Cycle in River Basin, China Institute of Water Resources and Research, Beijing, 100038, ChinaSchool of Environmental Studies, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan, 430074, China<p>Modern hydrology is embracing a data-intensive new era, with information from diverse sources currently providing support for hydrological inferences at broader scales. This results in a plethora of data-reliability-related challenges that remain unsolved. The water budget non-closure is a widely reported phenomenon in hydrological and atmospheric systems. Many existing methods aim to enforce water budget closure constraints through data fusion and bias correction approaches, often neglecting the physical interconnections between water budget components. To solve this problem, this study proposes a Multisource Dataset Correction Framework grounded in Physical Hydrological Process Modelling to enhance water budget closure, termed the PHPM-MDCF. The concept of decomposing the total water budget residuals into inconsistency and omission residuals is embedded in this framework to account for different residual sources. We examined the efficiency of the PHPM-MDCF and the distribution of residuals across 475 contiguous United States (CONUS) basins selected by hydrological simulation reliability. The results indicate that the inconsistency residuals dominate the total water budget residuals, exhibiting highly consistent spatiotemporal patterns. This portion of residuals can be significantly reduced through PHPM-MDCF correction and achieved satisfactory efficiency. The total water budget residuals decreased by 49 %, on average, across all basins, with reductions exceeding 80 % in certain basins. The credibility of the correction framework was further verified through noise experiments and comparisons with existing methods. In the end, we explored the potential factors influencing the distribution of residuals and found notable scale effects, along with the key role of hydro-meteorological conditions. This emphasizes the importance of carefully evaluating the water balance assumption when employing multisource datasets for hydrological inference in small and humid basins.</p>https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/29/627/2025/hess-29-627-2025.pdf
spellingShingle X. Zheng
D. Liu
S. Huang
H. Wang
X. Meng
Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
title Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
title_full Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
title_fullStr Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
title_full_unstemmed Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
title_short Achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling: insights from a large-sample study
title_sort achieving water budget closure through physical hydrological process modelling insights from a large sample study
url https://hess.copernicus.org/articles/29/627/2025/hess-29-627-2025.pdf
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