Abstract

Hydrometeorological variability, such as changes in extreme precipitation, snowmelt, or soil moisture excess, in Poland can lead to fluvial flooding. In this study we employed the dataset covering components of the water balance with a daily time step at the sub-basin level over the country for 1952–2020. The data set was derived from the previously calibrated and validated Soil & Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model for over 4000 sub-basins. We applied the Mann Kendall test and circular statistics-based approach on annual maximum floods and various potential flood drivers to estimate the trend, seasonality, and relative importance of each driver. In addition, two sub-periods (1952–1985 and 1986–2020) were considered to examine changes in flood mechanism in the recent decades. We show that floods in the northeast Poland were decreasing, while in the south the trend showed a positive behavior. Moreover, the snowmelt is a primary driver of flooding across the country, followed by soil moisture excess and precipitation. The latter seemed to be the dominant driver only in a small, mountain-dominated region in the south. Soil moisture excess gained importance mainly in the northern part, suggesting that the spatial pattern of flood generation mechanisms is also governed by other features. We also found a strong signal of climate change in large parts of northern Poland, where snowmelt is losing importance in the second sub-period in favor of soil moisture excess, which can be explained by the temperature warming and diminishing role of snow processes.

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