Publication details

Small watershed management as a tool of flood risk prevention

Authors

JAKUBÍNSKÝ Jiří BÁČOVÁ Radka SVOBODOVÁ Eva KUBÍČEK Petr HERBER Vladimír

Year of publication 2014
Type Article in Proceedings
Conference Evolving Water Resources Systems: Understanding, Predicting and Managing Water–Society Interactions Proceedings of ICWRS2014, Bologna, Italy, June 2014
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Science

Citation
Web http://www.proc-iahs.net/364/index.html
Doi http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/piahs-364-243-2014
Field Earth magnetism, geography
Keywords flood risk; small watercourse; water management; environmental change
Description According to the International Disaster Database (CRED 2009) frequency of extreme hydrological situations on a global scale is constantly increasing. The most typical example of a natural risk in Europe is flood – there is a decrease in the number of victims, but a significant increase in economic damage. A decrease in the number of victims is caused by the application of current hydrological management that focuses its attention primarily on large rivers and elimination of the damages caused by major flood situations. The growing economic losses, however, are a manifestation of the increasing intensity of floods on small watercourses, which are usually not sufficiently taken into account by the management approaches. The research of small streams should focus both on the study of the watercourse itself, especially its ecomorphological properties, and in particular on the possibility of flood control measures and their effectiveness. An important part of society’s access to sustainable development is also the evolution of knowledge about the river landscape area, which is perceived as a significant component of global environmental security and resilience, thanks to its high compensatory potential for mitigation of environmental change. The findings discussed under this contribution are based on data obtained during implementation of the project “GeoRISK” (Geo-analysis of landscape level degradation and natural risks formation), which takes into account the above approaches applied in different case studies – catchments of small streams in different parts of the Czech Republic. Our findings offer an opportunity for practical application of field research knowledge in decision making processes within the national level of current water management.
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