Using the KINEROS2 modeling framework to evaluate the increase in storm runoff from residential development in a semi-arid environment

Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
By: , and 

Links

Abstract

The increase in runoff from urbanization is well known; one extreme example comes from a 13 hectare residential neighborhood in southeast Arizona where runoff was 27 times greater than an adjacent grassland watershed over a forty‐month period from 2005 to 2008. Rainfall‐runoff modeling using the newly‐described KINEROS2 urban element and tension infiltrometer measurements indicate that 17±14 percent of this increase in runoff is due to a 53 percent decrease in the saturated hydraulic conductivity of constructed pervious areas, as compared to the undeveloped grassland. Directly connected impervious areas, primarily streets and driveways, cause 56 percent of the increase in runoff, and indirectly connected impervious areas, primarily rooftops and sidewalks, and a decrease in canopy interception account for the remaining 27 percent increase. Tension infiltrometer measurements show that saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks) is about double in the grassland watershed than in the urban watershed, 6.2 ± 3.5mm/hr and 2.9 ± 1.6mm/hr, respectively. Ks in the urban watershed identified from calibrating the rainfall‐runoff model to measured runoff is 9.5 ± 2.8 mm/hr—higher than what was measured but much lower than the 26 mm/hr value indicated by a soil‐texture based KINEROS2 parameter look‐up table. A new component of the KINEROS2 modeling framework, the urban element, forms the basis for the model by simulating a contiguous row of houses and the adjoining street as a series of pervious and impervious overland flow planes. Tests using different levels of discretization found that watershed geometry can be represented in a simplified manner, although more detailed discretization led to better model performance.

Study Area

Publication type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Title Using the KINEROS2 modeling framework to evaluate the increase in storm runoff from residential development in a semi-arid environment
Series title Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
DOI 10.1061/(ASCE)HE.1943-5584.0000655
Volume 18
Issue 6
Year Published 2013
Language English
Publisher ASCE
Contributing office(s) Arizona Water Science Center
Description 9 p.
Larger Work Type Article
Larger Work Subtype Journal Article
Larger Work Title Journal of Hydrologic Engineering
First page 698
Last page 706
Country United States
State Arizona
County Cochise
Additional Online Files (Y/N) N
Google Analytic Metrics Metrics page
Additional publication details