4.7 Article

Quantifying the effects of urbanization on floods in a changing environment to promote water security - A case study of two adjacent basins in Texas

Journal

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY
Volume 589, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2020.125154

Keywords

Urbanization; Paired catchments; Hydrological modeling; Changing climate; Land cover change; Water security

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation [CBET-1454297, CBET-1805584]
  2. U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Water Power Technologies Office as a part of the SECURE Water Act Section 9505 Assessment

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The increased occurrence of flood events resulting from urbanization and global climate change is a great threat to water security. To systematically evaluate the impacts of urbanization on floods, we applied a paired catchments approach to two adjacent river basins in south-central Texas - the San Antonio River Basin (SARB), with fast urbanization; and the Guadalupe River Basin (GRB), with lithe land cover change. A physics-based distributed hydrological model - the Distributed Hydrology Soil Vegetation Model, embedded with a multi-purpose reservoir module (DHSVM-Res) - was used to simulate streamflow and reservoir storage. The simulations were conducted under different land cover scenarios, including a newly developed continuous land cover series (CLCS). Holistic analyses were then conducted for the paired basins using three methods: analyzing the selected flood events, detecting change points (CP) of monthly floods, and testing the elasticity of long-term flood regimes. The results suggest that (1) urbanization may reduce lag time and elevate flood peaks significantly by 3-30% in our study area; (2) when there is little land cover change, changing climate is the major driver of variations in the monthly maximum streamflow (MMS); (3) fast urbanization can amplify streamflow variability, increase MMS significantly, and thus alter the timing of CP; and (4) the mean MMS of observed streamflow in the SARB has increased by as much as 75.7% from the pre-CP to post-CP periods. This comprehensive study fills in a gap in our current understanding of the isolated impacts of urbanization on flooding and is expected to support future explorations of anthropogenic influences on floods.

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