Towards a Framework of Catchment Classification for Hydrologic Predictions and Water Resources Management in the Ungauged Basin of the Congo River

Raphael Tshimanga, Gode Bola, Pierre Mulamba Kabuya, Landry Nkaba, Jeff Neal, Laurence P Hawker, Mark A. Trigg, Paul D Bates, Denis Hughes, Alain Laraque, Ross A Woods, Thorsten Wagener

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter in a book

7 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The need for a catchment classification framework for the Congo Basin is obvious given the basin's inherent heterogeneities, the ungauged nature of the basin, and the pressing needs for water resources management that include the quantification of current and future supplies and demands, which also encompass the impacts of future changes associated with climate and land use, as well as water resources operational policies. The need is also prompted by many local-scale management concerns within the basin. This study uses an a priori approach to determine homogenous climatic-physiographic regions that are expected to underline dominant hydrological processes characteristics. A set of 1740 catchment units are partitioned across the whole basin, based on a set of comprehensive criteria, including natural break of the elevation gradient (199 units), inclusion of socio-economic and anthropogenic systems (204 units), and water management units based on traditional nomenclature of the rivers within the basin (1337 units). The identified catchment units are used to assess existing datasets of the basin physical properties, necessary to derive descriptors of the catchments characteristics. An unsupervised classification, based on Hierarchical Agglomerative Cluster algorithm is used, that yields 11 homogenous groups that are consistent with the current perceptual understanding of the Congo Basin physiographic and climatic settings. These regions represent therefore an a priori classification that will be further used to derive functional relationships of the catchments, necessary to enable hydrological prediction and water management in the basin.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCongo Basin Hydrology, Climate, and Biogeochemistry: A Foundation for the Future
EditorsRaphael Tshimanga, Guy Moukandi N'kaya , Douglas Alsdorf
PublisherAmerican Geophysical Union
Chapter24
EditionFirst Edition, English Version
ISBN (Electronic)978-1-119-65699-9
Publication statusPublished - 18 Feb 2022

Structured keywords

  • Water and Environmental Engineering

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