Technical Papers
Sep 29, 2014

In-Stream Bacteria Modeling as a Function of the Hydrologic State of a Watershed

Publication: Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 141, Issue 4

Abstract

This paper presents a new way of modeling in-stream bacteria concentrations by examining a watershed in terms of wet and dry hydrologic states. Flow-duration curves were developed for four catchments of the Little River Experimental Watershed in Tifton, Georgia, and HSPF and SWAT bacteria models were built for the catchments. The flow-duration curves were used to designate wet and dry states of the catchments based on flow conditions instead of calendar day, the bacteria data sets were divided into wet and dry groups accordingly, and the models were calibrated to the wet and dry states. Water-quality parameter sensitivities revealed that each model placed varying emphasis on the parameters in each state according to the model’s structure, and certain parameters were insensitive in both wet and dry states. A custom parameter added to the models to represent background in-stream and/or distributed loads was consistently sensitive across hydrologic states and improved model predictions in both computer models. Seven of the eight scenarios considered attained better model predictions in the wet state than the dry state as evaluated by a log-transformed Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency. The results show that fundamental aspects of the models’ performance are revealed in light of the analysis by hydrologic state and can provide future guidance for the collection of better datasets for use in bacteria modeling.

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Published In

Go to Journal of Environmental Engineering
Journal of Environmental Engineering
Volume 141Issue 4April 2015

History

Received: Feb 4, 2013
Accepted: Jul 1, 2014
Published online: Sep 29, 2014
Discussion open until: Feb 28, 2015
Published in print: Apr 1, 2015

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Authors

Affiliations

Jeffrey J. Iudicello [email protected]
Engineering Specialist, Hydro Data Management, South Florida Water Management District, 3301 Gun Club Rd., West Palm Beach, FL 33406 (corresponding author). E-mail: [email protected]
David A. Chin, F.ASCE
Professor, Dept. of Civil, Architectural, and Environmental Engineering, Univ. of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33124.

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