Adaptive Water Management-land Use Practice for Improving Ecosystem Services – a Hungarian Modelling Case Study

Authors

  • Zsolt Kozma ORCID
    Affiliation

    Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, H-1521 Budapest, P.O.B. 91, Hungary

  • Zsolt Jolánkai
    Affiliation

    Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, H-1521 Budapest, P.O.B. 91, Hungary

  • Máté Krisztián Kardos
    Affiliation

    Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, H-1521 Budapest, P.O.B. 91, Hungary

  • Bálint Muzelák
    Affiliation

    Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, H-1521 Budapest, P.O.B. 91, Hungary

  • László Koncsos
    Affiliation

    Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Civil Engineering, Budapest University of Technology and Economics, H-1521 Budapest, P.O.B. 91, Hungary

https://doi.org/10.3311/PPci.18369

Abstract

During the 20th century in the Hungarian lowlands the emphasis was put on maximizing provisioning ecosystem services (ES), which caused the weakening of regulating and other services. With the growing environmental pressures, it is crucial to apply a more adaptive landscape management. This, however, leads to territorial conflicts, as large areas with water-tolerant land cover (i.e., wetlands, meadows, riparian forests) are needed to buffer extreme hydrological events.
We present some findings of the WateRisk project, a research that focused on the possible solutions of these conflicts. In a scenario-based case study, we analyze the outlined issue for the Szamos-Kraszna Interfluve, a 510 km2 lowland catchment heavily affected by excess water. Scenarios were evaluated with an integrated methodology that focuses on the water budget and the total values of ES. The efficiency of the drainage network was found to be minor/moderate as it provided only -1–5% reduction in the spatial extents of inundations, and it contributed only ~20% to the elimination of water coverage. Furthermore, comparing the present (defense-focused) and the alternative (water retention focused) scenarios, the latter turned out to provide higher monetary value for the summed individual and social benefits of ES. This underlines the need for extensive adaptive measures in both water management and landscape planning to create resilience and the ability to cope with contemporary environmental challenges.

Keywords:

hydrological modelling, ecosystem services, excess water, land use change, natural water retention measures

Published Online

2021-12-21

How to Cite

Kozma, Z., Jolánkai, Z., Kardos, M. K., Muzelák, B., Koncsos, L. “Adaptive Water Management-land Use Practice for Improving Ecosystem Services – a Hungarian Modelling Case Study”, Periodica Polytechnica Civil Engineering, 66(1), pp. 256–268, 2022. https://doi.org/10.3311/PPci.18369

Issue

Section

Technical Notes