Litcius/Paper detail

Flood-type trend analysis for alpine catchments

Anna E. Sikorska‐Senoner, Jan Seibert

2020Hydrological Sciences Journal51 citationsDOI

Abstract

In many places, magnitudes and frequencies of floods are expected to increase due to climate change. To understand these changes better, trend analyses of historical data are helpful. However, traditional trend analyses do not address issues related to shifts in the relative contributions of rainfall versus snowmelt floods, or in the frequency of a particular flood type. We present a novel approach for quantifying such trends in time series of floods using a fuzzy decision tree for event classification and applied it to maximal annual and seasonal floods in 27 alpine catchments for the period 1980–2014. Trends in flood types were studied with Sen's slope and double mass curves. Our results reveal a decreasing number of rain-on-snow and an increasing number of short rainfall events in all catchments, with flash floods increasing in smaller catchments. Overall, the results demonstrate the value of incorporating a fuzzy flood-type classification into flood trend analyses.

Topics & Concepts

SnowmeltFlash floodFlood mythEnvironmental science100-year floodHydrology (agriculture)Climate changeTrend analysisPhysical geographyClimatologySnowMeteorologyGeographyGeologyStatisticsMathematicsArchaeologyGeotechnical engineeringOceanographyHydrology and Watershed Management StudiesFlood Risk Assessment and ManagementHydrology and Drought Analysis