Published 2020
| Version v1
Publication
A clustering classification of catchment anthropogenic modification and relationships with floods
Contributors
Description
Anthropogenic modifications at catchments scale may be reconducted primarily at soil sealing and streams
culverting, even if important consequences result from roads density and, more in general, infrastructures as
they cause landscape fragmentation, and agricultural areas extension. Their most important outcomes in terms
of hydrologic balance are the decreasing time of concentration and the increasing flood risk at catchment scale.
The research introduces a methodological approach to classify the degree of anthropogenic modifications at
catchment scale: clustering techniques have been applied to 508 catchments in a high-risk flooding sector of
the Mediterranean region. Then, flood data recorded in the study area in the 1900–2018 period have been compared
to clustering classification, pointing out the relationships with soil sealing and hydrographical network
culverting in the catchment.
The analysis has been performed considering fourteen subsets of 8 descriptive parameters each that differ in the
evaluation of culverting in the terminal part of the hydrographical network; the analysis has been conducted
identifying the optimal number of descriptive parameters and the corresponding best number of clusters on
quantitative basis. The results show that three classes clustering is the more appropriate from a computational
point of view. That division looks coherent with the features of the studied basins and is well correlated with
floods occurrence in the last 100 years.
Finally, the proposedmethodology of anthropogenic disturbance classification at catchment scalemay be applied
to other areas even adapting and implementing other descriptive parameters. Then, itmay be used to support the
planning of mitigation strategies in term of flood risk.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1015909
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1015909
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE