WEPP is applicable for a wide range of geographic and land-use and management conditions, and capable of predicting spatial and temporal distributions of soil detachment and deposition on an event or continuous basis at both small and large scales. Hillslope applications of the model can simulate a single profile having various distributions of soil, vegetation, and plant/management conditions. In WEPP watershed applications, multiple hillslopes, channels, and impoundments can be linked together, and runoff and sediment yield from the entire catchment predicted. The model has been parameterized for a large number of soils across the U.S. and model performance has been assessed under a wide variety of land-use and management conditions. In addition, WEPP can generate long-term daily climatic data with CLIGEN, an auxiliary stochastic climate generator. The CLIGEN database contains weather statistics from more than 2,600 weather stations in the United States. The WEPP climate database is supplemented by the , which further refines the climatic data based on longitude, latitude, and elevation. WEPP can provide daily runoff, subsurface flow, and sediment output categorized into five particle-size classes: primary clay, primary silt, small aggregates, large aggregates, and primary sand, allowing calculation of selective sediment transport, and enrichment of the fine sediment sizes.
Recent improvement
Over the last decade, researchers have made significant improvements to the WEPP model. These include improved algorithms to simulate the effect of hydraulic structures and impoundments on runoff and sediment delivery, the addition of Penman-Monteith ET algorithms, subsurface converging lateral flow to represent variable source area runoff, improved canopybiomassroutines for forested applications, and the incorporation of an alternative, energy-balance-based winter hydrologic routine. A number of moderngraphical user interface programs have also been created, to assist in easier application of WEPP. The main interface for the model is a standalone Windows application, that allows a user to simulate hillslope profiles and small watersheds and have full control over all model inputs. Additionally, allow very easy and rapid use of the model while accessing existing soil, climate, and management databases. A number of geospatialinterfaces to WEPP are also available:
– an ArcView or ArcGIS extension that runs in conjunction with the WEPP Windows interface
The U.S. Forest Service has developed a suite of internet interfaces, the , for easier applications by stakeholders in forest and rangeland management and the general public. The interfaces can be readily accessed and run through the internet, and do not require any in-depth understanding of the hydrology, hydraulic and erosion principles embedded in the WEPP model. The FS WEPP interfaces include:
Cross Drain - to predict sediment yield from a road segment across a buffer
Rock:Clime - to create and download a modified WEPP climate file
WEPP:Road - to predict erosion from a forest road segment
WEPP:Road Batch - to predict erosion from multiple forest road segments
Disturbed WEPP - to predict erosion from rangeland and forest disturbances
Tahoe Basin Sediment Model - to predict runoff and erosion for the Lake Tahoe Basin
WEPP FuME - to predict erosion from fuel management practices
ERMiT - to predict the probability of sediment delivery with various mitigation treatments in each of five years following wildfire