Publication Date
March 5, 2010
Author
Delgado, J. M.Apel, H.Merz, B.
Countries :
Disaster Management Theme
-
Disaster Type
Flood
Document Type
Research Paper
Languange
English
Abstact :
Annual maximum discharge is analyzed in the Mekong river in Southeast Asia with regard to trends in average ?ood and trends in variability during the 20th century. Data from four gauging stations downstream of Vientiane, Laos, were used, covering two distinct hydrological regions within the Mekong basin. These time series span through over 70 years and are the longest daily discharge time series available in the region. The methods used, Mann Kendal test (MK), ordinary least squares with resampling (OLS) and non-stationary generalized extreme value function (NSGEV), are ?rst tested in a Monte Carlo experiment, in order to evaluate their detection power in presence of changing variance in the time series. The time series are generated using the generalized extreme value function with varying scale and location parameter. NSGEV outperforms MK and OLS, both because it resulted in less type II errors, but also because it allows for a more complete description of the trends, allowing to separate trends in average and in variability. Results from MK, OLS and NSGEV agreed on trends in average ?ood behaviour. However, the introduction of a time-varying scale parameter in the NSGEV allowed to isolate ?ood variability from the trend in average ?ood and to have a more complete view of the changes. Overall, results showed an increasing likelihood of extreme ?oods during the last half of the century, although the probability of an average ?ood decreased during the same period. A period of enhanced variance in the last quarter of the 20th century, estimated with the wavelet power spectrum as a function of time, was identi?ed, which con?rmed the results of the NSGEV. We conclude that the absence of detected positive trends in the hydrological time series was a methodological misconception due to over-simplistic models.