Articles | Volume 29, issue 8
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-29-2109-2025
https://doi.org/10.5194/hess-29-2109-2025
Research article
 | 
28 Apr 2025
Research article |  | 28 Apr 2025

Evaluating the effects of topography and land use change on hydrological signatures: a comparative study of two adjacent watersheds

Haifan Liu, Haochen Yan, and Mingfu Guan

Data sets

Dataset Open Research dataset: scenario inputs, element and river shapefiles, and land cover data Haifan Liu et al. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14539888

Model code and software

Simulator for Hydrologic Unstructured Domains L. Shu https://github.com/SHUD-System/SHUD

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Short summary
Land changes and landscape features critically impact water systems. Studying two watersheds in China’s Greater Bay Area, we found slope strongly influences water processes in mountainous areas. However, this relationship is weak in the lower regions of steeper watersheds. Urbanization leads to an increase in annual surface runoff, while flatter watersheds exhibit a buffering capacity against this effect. However, this buffering capacity diminishes with increasing annual rainfall intensity.
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