An appraisal of precipitation distribution in the high-altitude catchments of the Indus basin

Scarcity of in-situ observations coupled with high orographic influences has prevented a comprehensive assessment of precipitation distribution in the high-altitude catchments of Indus basin. Available data are generally fragmented and scattered with different organizations and mostly cover the vall...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Science of the total environment Vol. 548-549; pp. 289 - 306
Main Authors Dahri, Zakir Hussain, Ludwig, Fulco, Moors, Eddy, Ahmad, Bashir, Khan, Asif, Kabat, Pavel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.04.2016
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Summary:Scarcity of in-situ observations coupled with high orographic influences has prevented a comprehensive assessment of precipitation distribution in the high-altitude catchments of Indus basin. Available data are generally fragmented and scattered with different organizations and mostly cover the valleys. Here, we combine most of the available station data with the indirect precipitation estimates at the accumulation zones of major glaciers to analyse altitudinal dependency of precipitation in the high-altitude Indus basin. The available observations signified the importance of orography in each sub-hydrological basin but could not infer an accurate distribution of precipitation with altitude. We used Kriging with External Drift (KED) interpolation scheme with elevation as a predictor to appraise spatiotemporal distribution of mean monthly, seasonal and annual precipitation for the period of 1998–2012. The KED-based annual precipitation estimates are verified by the corresponding basin-wide observed specific runoffs, which show good agreement. In contrast to earlier studies, our estimates reveal substantially higher precipitation in most of the sub-basins indicating two distinct rainfall maxima; 1st along southern and lower most slopes of Chenab, Jhelum, Indus main and Swat basins, and 2nd around north-west corner of Shyok basin in the central Karakoram. The study demonstrated that the selected gridded precipitation products covering this region are prone to significant errors. In terms of quantitative estimates, ERA-Interim is relatively close to the observations followed by WFDEI and TRMM, while APHRODITE gives highly underestimated precipitation estimates in the study area. Basin-wide seasonal and annual correction factors introduced for each gridded dataset can be useful for lumped hydrological modelling studies, while the estimated precipitation distribution can serve as a basis for bias correction of any gridded precipitation products for the study area. [Display omitted] •We developed an improved estimation of precipitation distribution over the upper Indus basin.•Results show clear non-linear increases in precipitation with altitude.•The estimated precipitation is much higher compared to previous studies and gridded products.•The gridded precipitation products are unsuitable to force hydrological models in upper Indus.•The basin-wide seasonal and annual correction factors can be used for hydrological models.
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ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.01.001