Impact of land use changes on hydrological response of humid and sub-humid catchments in Karnataka State, India
Date
2016
Authors
B. P, Ganasri
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Due to activities aimed at improving the socio-economic status and wellbeing of people, natural
resources are exploited, and, as a result, environment has changed in terms of climate and land
use. These changes have great influence on the local hydrologic cycle and hydrologic response
of the catchment. In addition to climatic factors, the flow characteristics of a stream depend upon
catchment characteristics such as topography, soil, geology and land use and land cover. The
land use experiences rapid spatio-temporal changes that become one of the critical factors
influencing the pattern of streamflow.
The major objective of the present thesis work was to analyze and investigate the
interaction between hydrologic response and the land use/land cover (LU/LC) pattern in two
contrasting catchments namely Netravati river basin, a humid catchment and Harangi catchment,
a sub-humid catchment of Karnataka State, India. This research work was explicitly carried out
to: a) perform LU/LC classification and identifying the driving factors using multi-date satellite
images, b) prediction of future trends in LU/LC pattern using Land Change Modeler (LCM) and
CA-Markov model, c) estimate Actual Evapotranspiration (AET) and Land Surface Temperature
(LST) using satellite images, d) explore the applicability of the semi distributed model to
estimate streamflow, e) explore the applicability of monthly rainfall-runoff polygon in explaining
hydrological processes in humid and sub-humid catchments, and f) analyse the relationship
between changes in hydrological response and LU/LC change pattern. Study areas selected for
the present work: Netravati river basin and Harangi catchment. The Netravathi basin
geographically lies between 75º 01′ E and 75º 46′ E longitude and 12º 29′ N and 13º 11′ N
latitude with an area of 3312.74 sq. km. Harangi catchment geographically lies between 750 38’
E and 750 55’ E longitude and 120 24’ N and 120 40’ N latitude with an area of 417.54 sq. km.
The study utilized LCM and CA-Markov models for the prediction of LU/LC for the years
2010 and 2016 in Netravati river basin and 2013 and 2016 in Harangi catchment by considering
LU/LC maps of 2005, 2007 and 2007, 2010 as base maps respectively. LCM and CA-Markov
model predicted the LU/LC change by 2010 with an accuracy of 80.1% and 82.13%, respectively
in Netravati river basin. An accuracy of 86.6% and 80% is obtained in Harangi catchment by
using LCM and CA-Markov model respectively. The result of land change prediction for theii
year 2016 by CA-Markov model in Netravati river basin shows a decrease in forest, fallow land
and land with or without scrub land between 2010 and 2016, contributing to an increase in builtup land and plantation. Predicted map of Harangi catchment for the year 2016 shows that the
plantation is increasing from 175.77 to 220 sq.km area, but forest, fallow and wasteland are
showing a decreasing trend. Then, the present study estimated AET by using Priestley Taylor
method based on satellite data in Netravati and Harangi catchments. The Split Window (SW)
algorithm was utilized for spatial mapping of LST. Result shows that AET has increased during
the study period of 1997-2015. Since the AET estimation method is based on brightness
temperature and fractional vegetation cover, the increase in LST and decrease in fractional
vegetation cover has lead to increase in AET.
The present research work discussed about calibration of continuous hydrological model
to predict runoff volume in Netravati river basin. The result of simulation run for the calibration
period shows that the model is underestimating peak flows during monsoon and overestimating
low flows during summer. The Nash Sutcliffe Efficiency determined for calibration period is
about 0.251. This indicates that this model which required 19 parameters seem to be data
intensive and necessitated the development of simple methodology to estimate streamflow.
Therefore, the study developed a simple methodology to study the hydrological response to
changes in two contrasting catchments namely Netravati river basin and Harangi catchment by
using rainfall-runoff polygon method. The methodology involved qualitative and quantitative
interpretation of runoff coefficient and geometric properties of polygon in relationship with the
catchment behavior. Netravati river basin is represented by the less steep and wider polygon
indicates the fact that the catchment response to rainfall is variable in each month especially
from June to September during all periods. Harangi catchment is characterized by more steep
and narrow polygon implies the consistent variation of catchment response to rainfall pattern in
each month especially from the end of June to the end of August during all the periods. The
analysis concluded that the influence of LU/LC change on rainfall-runoff conversion mechanism
is predominant in Netravati river basin when compared to Harangi catchment. This is clearly
represented by wider polygon and smaller over all slope of polygon w.r.t x-axis.
Description
Keywords
Department of Applied Mechanics and Hydraulics, hydrologic modeling, land use and land cover change, LCM, CA-Markov, AET, rainfall-runoff polygon