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The Formation and Development of Hydrological Drought- Kimienna River Case Study
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  • Tesfaye Belay Senbeta,
  • Renata Julita Romanowicz,
  • Emilia Karamuz,
  • Jaroslaw J. Napiorkowski,
  • Ewa Bogdanowicz
Tesfaye Belay Senbeta
Institute of Geophysics Polish Academy of Sciences, Department of Hydrology and Hydrodynamics

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Renata Julita Romanowicz
Institute of Geophysics Polish Academy of Sciences, Department of Hydrology and Hydrodynamics
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Emilia Karamuz
Institute of Geophysics Polish Academy of Sciences, Department of Hydrology and Hydrodynamics
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Jaroslaw J. Napiorkowski
Institute of Geophysics Polish Academy of Sciences
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Ewa Bogdanowicz
Institute of Geophysics Polish Academy of Sciences, Department of Hydrology and Hydrodynamics
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Abstract

Human activities affecting hydrological processes in a catchment have many forms and the effect of those activities on the propagation of drought in a catchment depends on the relevant scales of the processes involved. The research presented focuses on the influence of reservoir and land use on drought dynamics. As a case study, we use the River Kamienna, Swietokrzyskie mountains, Poland. The Kamienna River has a mountainous character, with several water retention reservoirs and a history of industrial activities in the region. Annual water balance is also affected by water withdrawals in the catchment. Modeling tools in the form of lumped and semi-distributed hydrological models are applied to analyze hydrological processes in the catchment and to separate climatological and human-related factors affecting them. Two main goals of the modeling can be summarized as an investigation of the effects of reservoir operation on hydrological processes, especially dry season runoff, and an analysis of impacts of land-use change on the spatial-temporal characteristics of hydrological drought propagation. We apply three different models to simulate the catchment hydrological processes: two semi-distributed models, SWAT, and TOPMODEL, and the lumped hydrological model HBV. We present the calibration and verification of the models applied and a comparison of results using the goodness of fit criteria. The simulated flow at the gauging station along the Kamienna River is compared with the observed flow. The study applies several flow-related indices to understand how the climate and human-induced changes are affecting flow patterns in the region. The flow regime is described using a baseflow index and the runoff coefficient. The standardized runoff index (SRI) and runoff coefficients are also derived for the catchment. The results indicate that human activities dominated the decrease in runoff over the Kamienna River. The main finding shows that man-made activities such as the construction of reservoirs, land-use changes, mining, etc. have led to a more severe hydrological drought than under natural conditions. The research is part of the project “Human and climate impacts on drought dynamics and vulnerability” HUMDROUGHT (http://HUMDROUGHT.igf.edu.pl).