How well do gridded precipitation and actual evapotranspiration products represent the key water balance components in the Nile Basin?
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McNamara, Ian
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How well do gridded precipitation and actual evapotranspiration products represent the key water balance components in the Nile Basin?
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Study region: Nile Basin, Africa.
Study focus: The accurate representation of precipitation (P) and actual evapotranspiration (ETa)
patterns is crucial for water resources management, yet there remains a high spatial and temporal
variability among gridded products, particularly over data-scarce regions. We evaluated the
performance of eleven state-of-the-art P products and seven ETa products over the Nile Basin
using a four-step procedure: (i) P products were evaluated at the monthly scale through a pointto-
pixel approach; (ii) streamflow was modelled using the Random Forest machine learning
technique, and simulated for well-performing catchments for 2009–2018 (to correspond with ETa
product availability); (iii) ETa products were evaluated at the multiannual scale using the water
balance method; and (iv) the ability of the best-performing P and ETa products to represent
monthly variations in terrestrial water storage (ΔTWS) was assessed through a comparison with
GRACE Level-3 data.
New hydrological insights for the region: CHIRPSv2 was the best-performing P product (median
monthly KGE’ of 0.80) and PMLv2 and WaPORv2.1 the best-performing ETa products over the
majority of the evaluated catchments. The application of the water balance using these bestperforming
products captures the seasonality of ΔTWS well over the White Nile Basin, but
overestimates seasonality over the Blue Nile Basin. Our study demonstrates how gridded P and
ETa products can be evaluated over extremely data-scarce conditions using an easily transferable
methodology.
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Journal of Hydrology: Regional Studies 37 (2021) 100884
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