Abstract

This research aimed to evaluate the impact of land cover/use changes on watershed responses and hydrological processes by applying the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) distributed hydrologic model to the Buyukcekmece Water Basin of Istanbul Metropolitan city. SWAT model was run for two different scenarios for the 40-year period between 1973 and 2012, after completing calibration procedures under gauge-data scarce conditions. For the first scenario, 1990 dated Land cover/land use (LCLU) map and meteorological data obtained between 1973 and 2012 were used. For the second scenario, 2006 dated LCLU map and same meteorological data were used to analyze the impact of changing landscape characteristics on hydrological processes. In the selected watershed, LCLU changes started towards the end of the 1980s and reached a significant status in 2006; therefore, 1990 and 2006 dated LCLU maps are important to model human impact period in the watershed. Afterwards, LCLU changes within sub-basin level were investigated to quantify the effects of different types of land changes on the major hydrological components such as actual evapotranspiration, percolation, soil water, base flow, surface runoff and runoff. Our analysis indicated that, under the same climatic conditions, changes in land cover/use, specifically urbanization, played a considerable role in hydrological dynamics with changes on actual transpiration, base flow, surface runoff, runoff, percolation and soil water mainly due to urban and agricultural area changes. Among the different hydrological components analyzed at watershed level, percolation, ET and base flow were found to be highly sensitive to LCLU changes, whereas soil water was found as the least sensitive to same LCLU changes.

Highlights

  • Land cover/land use (LCLU) change has been significantly impacting global, regional and local climate, hydrological processes, water resources, soils and environment [1,2,3]

  • This study aimed to evaluate the impacts of LCLU changes on hydrological processes at watershed scale by applying the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) [23], distributed hydrologic model for the Buyukcekmece Water Basin of Istanbul Metropolitan city

  • A cumulative evaluation was conducted at watershed scale to evaluate the impacts of LCLU changes on hydrological components

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Summary

Introduction

Land cover/land use (LCLU) change has been significantly impacting global, regional and local climate, hydrological processes, water resources, soils and environment [1,2,3]. Sustainable development of water resources and effective management of these resources effectively require understanding of the responses of hydrological processes to LCLU changes [2,7,8,9]. Size, extent and location of land cover changes are important to determine to what extent these changes could affect local, regional, and global climate and hydrological processes [15]. The hydrology of a region could be affected as a result of changes in vegetation since these changes impact the infiltration rate, soil moisture, root depth and evapotranspiration [14,16]. Hydrological variability might occur in the form of rainfall–runoff response and erosion with the contribution of three primary watershed properties: soil, land cover, and topography [17]

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