TY - JOUR
T1 - Transfer learning framework for streamflow prediction in large-scale transboundary catchments
T2 - Sensitivity analysis and applicability in data-scarce basins
AU - Ma, Kai
AU - Shen, Chaopeng
AU - Xu, Ziyue
AU - He, Daming
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Science Press 2024.
PY - 2024/5
Y1 - 2024/5
N2 - The imbalance in global streamflow gauge distribution and regional data scarcity, especially in large transboundary basins, challenge regional water resource management. Effectively utilizing these limited data to construct reliable models is of crucial practical importance. This study employs a transfer learning (TL) framework to simulate daily streamflow in the Dulong-Irrawaddy River Basin (DIRB), a less-studied transboundary basin shared by Myanmar, China, and India. Our results show that TL significantly improves streamflow predictions: the optimal TL model achieves an average Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency of 0.872, showing a marked improvement in the Hkamti sub-basin. Despite data scarcity, TL achieves a mean NSE of 0.817, surpassing the 0.655 of the process-based model MIKE SHE. Additionally, our study reveals the importance of source model selection in TL, as different parts of the flow are affected by the diversity and similarity of data in the source model. Deep learning models, particularly TL, exhibit complex sensitivities to meteorological inputs, more accurately capturing non-linear relationships among multiple variables than the process-based model. Integrated gradients (IG) analysis further illustrates TL’s ability to capture spatial heterogeneity in upstream and downstream sub-basins and its adeptness in characterizing different flow regimes. This study underscores the potential of TL in enhancing the understanding of hydrological processes in large-scale catchments and highlights its value for water resource management in transboundary basins under data scarcity.
AB - The imbalance in global streamflow gauge distribution and regional data scarcity, especially in large transboundary basins, challenge regional water resource management. Effectively utilizing these limited data to construct reliable models is of crucial practical importance. This study employs a transfer learning (TL) framework to simulate daily streamflow in the Dulong-Irrawaddy River Basin (DIRB), a less-studied transboundary basin shared by Myanmar, China, and India. Our results show that TL significantly improves streamflow predictions: the optimal TL model achieves an average Nash-Sutcliffe efficiency of 0.872, showing a marked improvement in the Hkamti sub-basin. Despite data scarcity, TL achieves a mean NSE of 0.817, surpassing the 0.655 of the process-based model MIKE SHE. Additionally, our study reveals the importance of source model selection in TL, as different parts of the flow are affected by the diversity and similarity of data in the source model. Deep learning models, particularly TL, exhibit complex sensitivities to meteorological inputs, more accurately capturing non-linear relationships among multiple variables than the process-based model. Integrated gradients (IG) analysis further illustrates TL’s ability to capture spatial heterogeneity in upstream and downstream sub-basins and its adeptness in characterizing different flow regimes. This study underscores the potential of TL in enhancing the understanding of hydrological processes in large-scale catchments and highlights its value for water resource management in transboundary basins under data scarcity.
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U2 - 10.1007/s11442-024-2235-x
DO - 10.1007/s11442-024-2235-x
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85192848613
SN - 1009-637X
VL - 34
SP - 963
EP - 984
JO - Journal of Geographical Sciences
JF - Journal of Geographical Sciences
IS - 5
ER -