4.6 Article

Design of Terrace Drainage Networks Using UAV-Based High-Resolution Topographic Data

Journal

WATER
Volume 11, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w11040814

Keywords

terraces; drainage design; unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV); high-resolution topography; remote sensing survey; water erosion; vineyards; Italy

Funding

  1. project ViTE Vineyard Terraced landscapes: understanding the Environmental constraints to improve sustainable managements
  2. Linda Scattolin research program at TESAF department of the University of Padova (Italy)

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Hillslope viticulture has a long history in Mediterranean Europe, and still holds important cultural and economic value. Steep hillsides have widely been levelled by terraces, in order to control surface water flow and facilitate cultivation. However, under unsustainable management and growing rainfall aggressiveness, terraced vineyards have become one of the most erosion-prone agricultural landscapes. The Valcamonica valley in Lombardy (Italy) presents a typical example of an ancient wine production region where rural land abandonment has previously caused widespread degradation of the traditional terracing systems. Recently, a local revival of wine production led to restoration plans of the terraces and their drainage functioning, to safeguard productivity and hydrogeologic safety. In this study, an Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) survey was carried out to reconstruct an accurate and precise 3D terrain model of a Valcamonica vineyard through photogrammetry. The resulting high-resolution topographic data allowed insights of surface flow-induced soil erosion patterns based on the Relative Path Impact Index (RPII). Three diverse drainage networks were designed and digitally implemented, allowing scenario analysis of the costs and benefits in terms of potential erosion mitigation. The presented methodology could likely improve the time-efficiency and cost-effectiveness of similar restoration plans in degraded landscapes.

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