Abstract

Drought events, worsened by climate change, produce detrimental impacts on freshwater availability especially in arid and semi-arid regions. The situation becomes more critical when these hydrologic extremes combine with land use change mainly caused by anthropogenic factors, such as urbanization, intensive farming, and industrial activities. The present study is designed to investigate the combined impacts of climate and land use changes on the future freshwater  stored in the artificial reservoirs of three adjacent river basins located in the central Sicily (Italy), i.e: Verdura (2 active reservoirs with capacities 9.2 Mmc and 4.19 Mmc), Imera Meridionale (one active reservoir with capacity 15 Mmc), and Platani (one active reservoir with capacity 20.7Mmc), using the Soil and Water Assessment Tool (SWAT) model. The reservoirs are used for irrigation, drinking water supply, and electric power generation. Future climate variables such as rainfall, minimum and maximum temperatures were derived from an ensemble Regional Climate Models for two main representative concentration pathway (RCP) scenarios, such as an intermediate emission scenario (RCP4.5) and a severe emission scenario (RCP8.5). A coupled multi-layer perceptron neural networks and cellular automata (MLP-CA) model was implemented to simulate future land use of the region considering the CORINE land cover in 2000, 2006, 2012, and 2018 as a reference dataset. The future land use is then projected until the mid-century (2048) in a six-year interval using the validated MLP-CA model. The soil data from the European soil data center (EUSDAC) was used as input for the SWAT model. The result indicated that the basins could experience a decrease in inflows to the reservoirs. The separate evaluation of climate change and land use changes indicated that the effect of climate change on streamflow variation is more pronounced than the effect of land use change only. In this study, we introduced new hydrological insights into the region by analyzing the attributions of climate change, land use change, and coupled climate and land use changes on the future freshwater availability which were overlooked in the previous studies. The implementation of the proposed approach can contribute to design environmentally sustainable and climate resilient river basin management strategies.   Keywords: MLP-CA, Land use change, Climate change, SWAT, Hydrological modeling, Water availability

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