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Main Authors: Manna, Alokesh, Mehan, Sushant, Amatya, Devendra M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01001
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author Manna, Alokesh
Mehan, Sushant
Amatya, Devendra M.
author_facet Manna, Alokesh
Mehan, Sushant
Amatya, Devendra M.
contents Accurately predicting water table dynamics is vital for sustaining groundwater resources that support ecological functions and anthropogenic activities. This study evaluates a statistical model (BigVAR) that handles three major flexibilities: (a) prediction under a sparsity assumption in coefficients, (b) consideration of a time series autoregression framework, and (c) allowance for lags in both dependent and independent variables for estimating water table depth using daily hydroclimatic data from the USDA Forest Service Santee Experimental Forest (SC) and a site in NC. Data from 2006--2019 (SC) and 1988--2008 (NC) were used, with key predictors including soil and air temperature, precipitation, wind, and radiation. For WS80, RMSE during the dormant season was 10.09 cm, with a daily testing phase RMSE of 14.94 cm. The model achieved an R^2 of 0.93 for 2019 (a dry year) and 0.96 for 2016 (a wet year). Solar radiation, rainfall, and wind direction were among the most influential variables. This predictive model aids in managing wetland hydrology and supports decision-making for forest managers and hydrologists.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_01001
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Development of a Statistical Predictive Model for Daily Water Table Depth and Important Variables Selection for Inference
Manna, Alokesh
Mehan, Sushant
Amatya, Devendra M.
Applications
Hydrology
Accurately predicting water table dynamics is vital for sustaining groundwater resources that support ecological functions and anthropogenic activities. This study evaluates a statistical model (BigVAR) that handles three major flexibilities: (a) prediction under a sparsity assumption in coefficients, (b) consideration of a time series autoregression framework, and (c) allowance for lags in both dependent and independent variables for estimating water table depth using daily hydroclimatic data from the USDA Forest Service Santee Experimental Forest (SC) and a site in NC. Data from 2006--2019 (SC) and 1988--2008 (NC) were used, with key predictors including soil and air temperature, precipitation, wind, and radiation. For WS80, RMSE during the dormant season was 10.09 cm, with a daily testing phase RMSE of 14.94 cm. The model achieved an R^2 of 0.93 for 2019 (a dry year) and 0.96 for 2016 (a wet year). Solar radiation, rainfall, and wind direction were among the most influential variables. This predictive model aids in managing wetland hydrology and supports decision-making for forest managers and hydrologists.
title Development of a Statistical Predictive Model for Daily Water Table Depth and Important Variables Selection for Inference
topic Applications
Hydrology
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.01001