Natural streamflow regime alterations: Damming of the Piave river basin (Italy)


Autoria(s): Botter, G; Basso, S; Porporato, A; Rodriguez-Iturbe, I; Rinaldo, A
Data(s)

01/06/2010

Identificador

Water Resources Research, 2010, 46 (6)

0043-1397

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4049

0043-1397

http://hdl.handle.net/10161/4049

Idioma(s)

en_US

Relação

Water Resources Research

10.1029/2009WR008523

Water Resources Research

Tipo

Journal Article

Resumo

A novel approach is proposed to estimate the natural streamflow regime of a river and to assess the extent of the alterations induced by dam operation related to anthropogenic (e.g., agricultural, hydropower) water uses in engineered river basins. The method consists in the comparison between the seasonal probability density function (pdf) of observed streamflows and the purportedly natural streamflow pdf obtained by a recently proposed and validated probabilistic model. The model employs a minimum of landscape and climate parameters and unequivocally separates the effects of anthropogenic regulations from those produced by hydroclimatic fluctuations. The approach is applied to evaluate the extent of the alterations of intra-annual streamflow variability in a highly engineered alpine catchment of north-eastern Italy, the Piave river. Streamflows observed downstream of the regulation devices in the Piave catchment are found to exhibit smaller means/modes, larger coefficients of variation, and more pronounced peaks than the flows that would be observed in the absence of anthropogenic regulation, suggesting that the anthropogenic disturbance leads to remarkable reductions of river flows, with an increase of the streamflow variability and of the frequency of preferential states far from the mean. Some structural limitations of management approaches based on minimum streamflow requirements (widely used to guide water policies) as opposed to criteria based on whole distributions are also discussed. Copyright © 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.