Background
Type: Article

Evaluation of the SWAT model's sediment and nutrient components in the piedmont physiographic region of Maryland

Journal: Transactions of the American Society of Agricultural Engineers (00012351)Year: 2004/09/01Volume: 47Issue: 5Pages: 1523 - 1538
Chu T.W.Shirmohammadi A.Montas H.J.Sadeghi A.a
Language: English

Abstract

Mathematical watershed-scale models are among the best tools available for analyzing water resources (quantity and quality) issues in spatially diverse watersheds since continuous water quality monitoring is expensive and spatially impractical in mixed land use watersheds. However, models without appropriate validation may lead to misconceptions and erroneous predictions. This study used six years of hydrologic and water quality data to calibrate and validate the capability of SWAT (Soil and Water Assessment Tool) model in assessing nonpoint source pollution for a 346 ha watershed in the Piedmont physiographic region. The evaluation of the hydrology component of SWAT completed in a previous study pointed out that SWAT has no mechanism to account for subsurface flow contributions from outside the watershed. For this evaluation, all nutrient loadings leaving the watershed were adjusted to subtract the chemical transport via subsurface flow contributions from outside the watershed. Evaluation results indicated a strong agreement between yearly measured and simulated data for sediment, nitrate, and soluble phosphorus loadings. However, simulations of monthly sediment and nutrient loadings were poor. Overall, it was concluded that SWAT is a reasonable watershed-scale model for long-term simulation of different management scenarios. However, its use on storm-by-storm or even on monthly basis may not be appropriate for watersheds with similar physiography and size. Additionally, ignoring the subsurface contribution of water and chemicals from outside the watershed into the watershed aquifer could cause significant errors in model prediction.


Author Keywords

NutrientsSedimentSWAT modelWater qualityWatershed scaleHydrologyLand UseSedimentsWater PollutionWater QualityWater Sheds

Other Keywords

HydrologyLand UseSedimentsWater PollutionWater QualityWater ShedsMarylandNorth AmericaUnited StatesWestern HemisphereWorldComputer simulationMathematical modelshydrological modelingnutrientsediment transportwatershedNutrient loadingsPhysiographyWatershed-scale modelsWatersheds