Evaluating landscape metrics for characterising hydrological response to storm events in urbanised catchments

Date

2020-05-12

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Department

Type

Article

ISSN

1573-062X

Format

Citation

Miller JD, Stewart L, Hess TM, Brewer T. (2020) Evaluating landscape metrics for characterising hydrological response to storm events in urbanised catchments. Urban Water Journal, Volume 17, Issue 3, May 2020, pp. 247-258

Abstract

Hydrological response of an urban catchment to storm events is determined by a number of factors including the degree of urbanisation and distribution and connectivity of urbanised surfaces. Therefore, the ability of spatially averaged catchment descriptors to characterise storm response is limited. Landscape metrics, widely used in ecology to quantify landscape structure, are employed to quantify urban land-cover patterns across a rural-urban gradient of catchments and attribute hydrological response. Attribution of all response metrics, except peak flow, is improved by combining lumped catchment descriptors with spatially explicit landscape metrics. Those representing connectedness and shape of suburban and natural greenspace improve characterisation of percentage runoff and storm runoff. Connectivity and location of urban surfaces are more important than impervious area alone for attribution of timing, validating findings from distributed hydrological modelling studies. Findings suggest potential improvements in attribution of storm runoff in ungauged urban catchments using landscape metrics.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Hydrology, urban, flood, hydrograph, landscape metrics, catchment descriptors

DOI

Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International

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