Abstract:
Hydrologic studies on rainfall-runoff have been extensively applied by water resource planners
to simulate the hydrological response in many regions around the world to fulfill various
desirable needs with the purpose of effective and proper planning and managing of water
resources for present and future uses. However, such research does not pay enough attention
to the Welmel watershed, Genale Dewa Basin, Ethiopia, which may be affected by water
insecurity. Therefore, the main objective of this study was to simulate rainfall-runoff processes
using Hydrologic Engineering Center-Hydrologic Modeling System (HEC-HMS) to model
and predict stream flow in the Welmel watershed. The input data used were the meteorological
data, hydrological data, land use land cover data, soil data and Digital Elevation model
obtained from the National Meteorological Service Agency, Ministry of water and Energy,
Engineering Corporation of Oromia and Website respectively. The missing value of precipitation
data was filled using the XLSTAT, and the consistency of data was checked using a double mass
curve. Hydrologic Engineering Center Geospatial Hydrologic Modeling System (HEC-GeoHMS)
was used for prepared basin model imported to HEC-HMS. The SCS-CN loss, SCS unit
hydrograph, Constant monthly, and Muskingum methods are used to measure precipitation loss
modeling, transform modeling, base flow modeling, and flood routing. For model calibration
(1990-2010) and validation (2011-2015), hydro-meteorological data were used. The parameters
used to evaluate the models' sensitivity were; curve number, initial abstraction, basin lag,
Muskingum k, and Muskingum x. The results show that the model was most sensitive to basin lag
and Muskingum (K) for this study respectively. During the calibration and validation phase, the
performance of the model was assessed by Nash Sutcliffe Efficiency (NSE), Root means square
error (RMSE), Coefficient of determination (R2), Percent bias (PBIAS), Percent error in volume
(PEV), and Percent error in peak flow (PEPF), indicating NSE (0.702), R2 (0.7156), RMSE
(0.5), PBIAS (5.67%), PEV (-5.68), and PEPF (8.76) and NSE (0.735), R2 (0.7559), RMSE (0.5),
PBIAS (-2.32%), PEV (2.32), and PEPF (12.21), respectively. The simulated and observed peak
discharges differed by 20.5 m3/s in calibration time. This indicates that the peak discharge was
well predicted. In the validation period, there was a difference of 22.4 m3/s between the
observed and simulated peak discharge. This means that the peak discharge was slightly higher
than expected. For this study, calibrated and validated model results showed that the model
performed well. The maximum and minimum simulated daily flow potential of watershed was
215.7m3/s and 6.3m3/s respectively. Flood prediction was conducted in the HEC-HMS using 24-
hour rainfall depths of 2, 5,10, 25, 50,100,200, and 500 years return period and found to be
139.7 m3/s, 176.1 m3/s, 203.1 m3/s, 243.8 m3/s, 287.6 m3/s, 322.8m3/s, 365.9m3/s, and 418.8
m3/s, respectively. Also using the General extreme value and the General pareto of the
Statistical flood frequency analysis, the peak flow discharge for 2,5,10,25,50,100, 200, and 500
year return period were 136.23m3/s, 181.28 m3/s, 210.35 m3/s, 246.24m3/s, 272.27 m3/s,
297.62 m3/s, 322.40m3/s, 354.38 m3/s, and 100.74m3/s, 158.74 m3/s, 191.19 m3/s, 223.20m3/s,
241.20m3/s, 255.13 m3/s, 265.93 m3/s, 276.56m3/s respectively. The minimum and maximum
peak flow records in HEC-HMS were 139.7m3/s and 418.8 m3/s, respectively. Therefore, these
predicted peak flood will help in water resources and flood management for this study area.