Published August 2, 2021 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Understanding the relationship between rainfall and flood probabilities through combined intensity-duration-frequency analysis

  • 1. Institute of Hydraulic Engineering and Water Resources Management, Vienna University of Technology, Karlsplatz 13/222, 1040 Wien, Austria
  • 2. Leichtweiß Institute for Hydraulic Engineering and Water Resources, Department of Hydrology, Water Management and Water Protection, Technische Universität Braunschweig, Brunswick, Germany

Description

The aim of this paper is to explore how rainfall mechanisms and catchment characteristics shape the relationship between rainfall and flood probabilities. We propose a new approach of comparing intensity-duration-frequency statistics of maximum annual rainfall with those of maximum annual streamflow in order to infer the catchment behavior for runoff extremes. We calibrate parsimonious intensity-duration-frequency scaling models to data from 314 rain gauges and 428 stream gauges in Austria, and analyze the spatial patterns of the resulting distributions and model parameters. Results indicate that rainfall extremes tend to be more variable in the dry lowland catchments dominated by convective rainfall than in the mountainous catchments where annual rainfall is higher and rainfall mechanisms are mainly orographic. Flood frequency curves are always steeper than the corresponding rainfall frequency curves with the exception of glaciated catchments. Based on the proposed approach of combined intensity-duration-frequency statistics we analyze elasticities as the percent change of flood discharge for a 1% change in extreme rainfall through comparing rainfall and flood quantiles. In wet catchments, the elasticities tend to unity, i.e. rainfall and flood frequency curves have similar steepness, due to persistently high soil moisture levels. In dry catchments, elasticities are much higher, implying steeper frequency curves of floods than those of rainfall, which is interpreted in terms of more skewed distributions of event runoff coefficients. While regional differences in the elasticities can be attributed to both dominating regional rainfall mechanisms and regional catchment characteristics, our results suggest that catchment characteristics are the dominating controls. With increasing return period, elasticities tend towards unity, which is consistent with various runoff generation concepts. Our findings may be useful for process-based flood frequency extrapolation and climate impact studies, and further studies are encouraged to explore the tail behavior of elasticities.

Notes

Korbinian Breinl received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant agreement STARFLOOD No. 793558. David Lun received financial support from the DFG project 'SPATE' (FOR 2416), the FWF project 'SPATE' (I 4776) and the FWF Vienna Doctoral Program on Water Resource Systems (DK W1219-N28). Hannes Müller-Thomy acknowledges the funding from the Research Fellowship (MU 4257/1-1) by DFG e.V., Bonn, Germany. This research also received funding from the Austrian Federal Ministry for Sustainability and Tourism and the Bavarian Environment Agency in the framework of the project WETRAX+. We thank the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics for providing the rain gauge data and the European Severe Storms Laboratory (ESSL) and Thomas Schreiner for providing historical hailstorm, wind gust and tornado reports of the European Severe Weather Database (ESWD). Rain gauge data are available from the Central Institute for Meteorology and Geodynamics (ZAMG) from https://www.zamg.ac.at/cms/en/climate/climate. River gauge data are available from the Austrian Federal Ministry of Agriculture, Regions and Tourism (BMLRT) from https://www.bmlrt.gv.at/english/water.html. Severe weather data for Austria (ESWD database) can be accessed via https://www.eswd.eu/. The authors acknowledge TU Wien Bibliothek for financial support through its Open Access Funding Programme.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
STARFLOOD - Space-Time scAling of the Rainfall to FLOOD transformation 793558
FWF Austrian Science Fund
Decadal changes of flood probabilities I 4776
FWF Austrian Science Fund
Water Resource Systems W 1219