4.6 Article

Remote Sensing Methodology for Roughness Estimation in Ungauged Streams for Different Hydraulic/Hydrodynamic Modeling Approaches

Journal

WATER
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/w14071076

Keywords

HEC-RAS; flood inundation modeling; modeling approach; spatial distributed roughness coefficient; UAV; remote sensing; image processing; image texture; river bed material mapping

Funding

  1. European Union (European Social FundESF) through the Operational Programme <> [MIS 5048553]

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This study investigates the generation of spatially distributed roughness coefficient maps based on image analysis and their impact on flood inundation modeling. A combination of Grey-Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM) and Maximum Likelihood Classifier (MLC) was found to be a satisfactory approach. Different hydraulic modeling approaches were used for flood inundation modeling, with validation using historical flood extent data.
This study investigates the generation of spatially distributed roughness coefficient maps based on image analysis and the extent to which those roughness coefficient values affect the flood inundation modeling using different hydraulic/hydrodynamic modeling approaches ungauged streams. Unmanned Aerial Vehicle (UAV) images were used for the generation of high-resolution Orthophoto mosaic (1.34 cm/px) and Digital Elevation Model (DEM). Among various pixel-based and object-based image analyses (OBIA), a Grey-Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM) was eventually selected to examine several texture parameters. The combination of local entropy values (OBIA method) with Maximum Likelihood Classifier (MLC; pixel-based analysis) was highlighted as a satisfactory approach (65% accuracy) to determine dominant grain classes along a stream with inhomogeneous bed composition. Spatially distributed roughness coefficient maps were generated based on the riverbed image analysis (grain size classification), the size-frequency distributions of river bed materials derived from field works (grid sampling), detailed land use data, and the usage of several empirical formulas that used for the estimation of Manning's n values. One-dimensional (1D), two-dimensional (2D), and coupled (1D/2D) hydraulic modeling approaches were used for flood inundation modeling using specific Manning's n roughness coefficient map scenarios. The validation of the simulated flooded area was accomplished using historical flood extent data, the Critical Success Index (CSI), and CSI penalization. The methodology was applied and demonstrated at the ungauged Xerias stream reach, Greece, and indicated that it might be applied to other Mediterranean streams with similar characteristics and flow conditions.

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