1. Introduction
River floods due to excessive rainfall–runoff are responsible for recurrent damage to basins where soil surface characteristics have been modified as a consequence of deforestation and urban growth. A decrease in the connectivity of river networks and the loss of fluvial floodplains, in combination with the conversion of agriculture land to less permeable urban surfaces, can significantly reduce the basin’s response time during storm events, which in turn increases peak discharges and the risk of flooding.
The State of Tabasco (Mexico) recurrently experiences inundation events throughout its territory. It is located within the delta of two main rivers: the Grijalva and the Usumacinta. These rivers account for approximately 30% of the total runoff in Mexico, and converge in the same system along their course towards the Gulf of Mexico, about 40 km downstream of the city of Villahermosa. A lack of environmental planning has drastically modified the characteristics of the terrain of this state over recent decades. The elimination of vegetable cover has led to a loss of soils and a reduction in infiltration capacity, causing higher volumes of surface runoff, silting, and hillslope erosion. In the whole territory of Mexico, from 1970, there have been substantial changes in land use, which have drastically increased the number of floods [
1]. The rapid transformation of the territory has led to significant loss of vegetation [
2] that, together with an increase in the frequency of extreme weather phenomena, has increased the flood risk throughout the country. Zúñiga and Magaña [
3] analyzed the frequency of floods in Mexico by comparing observed and modeled frequency values for the period 1970–2010, finding that most flood events had occurred as a result of the rapid process of deforestation that affected the basins of the main rivers of the country. Results of this study show that the regions experiencing substantial increases in flood frequency over recent years are located mainly along the coasts, although the authors also stressed that the spatial distribution of floods depends to a great extent on the vulnerability of the regions in which rainfall occurs. In the specific case of the State of Tabasco, Aparicio et al. [
4] pointed out that the change of land use from forest to agriculture leads to the transport of large quantities of sediments due to the increased erosion of basins, and they found that this can be considered to be one of the major causes of disasters in the region. The grass cover of the basins increases the roughness of the soil and reduces the runoff coefficient [
5], which determines the magnitude of the discharges downstream. Grassland can significantly reduce runoff, compared to bare and agriculture land [
6].
Over the last 40 years, the construction of housing complexes and containment bridges within Villahermosa have not only modified the landscape, but have also caused a phenomenon of irregular settlements on the margins of the same embankments. This process is expected to continue in the years to come: for the next 30 years, the city’s growth rate is expected to be greater than 0.50%. In addition, the exposure of the population to river flooding has dramatically increased in recent years due the presence of hurricanes in the coastal areas of the Pacific and Atlantic oceans, which produce heavy rainfall, leading to the transportation and deposition of large quantities of silts in the Tabasco plain [
7]. From 1940 to 1990, the State of Tabasco lost 97% of its forest resources due to excessive exploitation of forests, causing wind and water erosion to affect almost 50% of the territory. In October 2007, Tabasco was hit by an intense flooding event. Extraordinary rains in the Grijalva basin generated intense runoff throughout the Tabasco plain, flooding about 70% of the state. The capital city, Villahermosa, was especially badly hit, suffering economic losses of more than three billion dollars. From 2008 to 2011, the city was continuously affected by the flooding of the rivers that traverse it [
8].
In recent decades, the analysis of floods in urban areas has improved considerably with the introduction of accurate numerical models [
9,
10,
11] and advanced methodologies, which aim in particular at the combination and integration of land use change forecasting models with hydrological models, with the objective of being able to determine increasingly precise peak discharge rates as a function of the predicted urbanization [
12,
13]. In particular, Wang et al. [
13] presented the application of a cellular automata based model (Celular Automata Dual-DraInagE Simulation, CADDIES) to a small study area to analyze flood inundation, and demonstrate the importance of identifying and using key urban features, obtained from terrain data, to better reproduce high resolution flood processes. The effect of urbanization and changes in land use on floods has been studied from different perspectives, focusing both on river feeding catchments and on potentially floodable areas [
14,
15,
16,
17], with the conclusion that an appropriate study of land use and consequent management are crucial in flood attenuation.
This study analyzed two of the main causes of the increase in flood frequency and magnitude in Villahermosa: changes in land use in the hydrological basins located upstream of the city, and the expansion of the urban area in the city.
In the present study, we first analyzed the effect of the changes in land use of the catchments that drain to Villahermosa. Flood discharges for different return periods were calculated using both the oldest information on the basin’s land use (up until 1992) and the most recent (2013). The scenarios obtained were numerically simulated with the 2D flood inundation model Iber [
18]. Secondly, the effect of the increase in the area occupied by buildings in the city was analyzed by comparing the inundation depths for three possible future urbanization scenarios.
The remainder of this paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 presents the estimation of flood discharges for different return periods, considering both the land uses of the basins as they were in 1992 and the present ones. The inundation model used to evaluate the flood depths in the city for past and present scenarios is described in
Section 3. The results of the numerical simulations are presented and discussed in
Section 4. The influence of changes in land use (from 1992 to the present day) on inundation levels in the city was quantified and analyzed. Then, three possible future urbanization scenarios were proposed, and their effects on inundation hazard were analyzed.
2. Estimation of Flood Discharges
The city of Villahermosa is found in the municipality of Centro and is located within the hydrological zone of Grijalva-Usumacinta [
1], which has a territorial extension of 102,456 km
2. This hydrological zone is divided into 83 basins, eight of which drain into the city of Villahermosa. Four rivers are responsible for the flood events in the urban area of the city: the Carrizal, the Viejo Mezcalapa, the Pichucalco, and the de la Sierra rivers.
Figure 1 shows the catchments of these rivers, while their hydrological characteristics are listed in
Table 1.
Flood discharges of each river for different return periods were estimated with Chow’s method [
19], including two adjustment factors to account for the spatial and temporal variability of extreme rainfall in large catchments. The flood discharge for a given return period is calculated as:
where
A is the basin area (km
2),
X is the runoff factor (cm/h),
Z is the peak reduction factor,
K is a correction coefficient to account for the temporal variability of extreme rainfall, and
is an areal reduction factor that relates extreme area-averaged rainfall with extreme point rainfall. Factor
Z relates to the morphological parameters of each basin, and is calculated according to a relationship between the concentration time and the retrace time with the support of a nomogram [
19]. For the Carrizal and Mezcalapa basins, this was estimated to 1, and for the Pichucalco and De La Sierra basins to 0.95. The runoff factor
X is calculated as:
where
is the excess precipitation depth (given in cm) for a given storm duration and return period, and
is the catchment concentration time (given in hours). The concentration time was calculated as the average of the values obtained with Kirpich’s formula [
20].
The coefficients
K and
are given as:
where the concentration time (
) is given in hours and the area of the catchment (
A) in km
2.
Following the recommendations of the Soil Conservation Service, the excess precipitation depth was computed from the total precipitation by means of the Curve Number (
N), which is based mainly on land use:
where
P is the total precipitation depth associated with a given return period, given in cm. The precipitation depths (
P) were obtained from the rainfall database of the Secretary of Communications and Transportation (SCT, Mexico).
Information on the land uses of the catchments under study over recent years was provided by the National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI) [
1]. Geospatial Information provided by INEGI [
1] shows the distribution of agricultural land use, natural land, and induced vegetation in the country. It also indicates livestock and forestry uses and other uses that occur in the territory related to vegetation cover. The use of agricultural land is represented according to the availability of water for different types of crops during their agricultural cycle. The vegetation is represented in accordance with the provisions of the Guidelines for the use of the Catalog of Types of Natural and Induced Vegetation of Mexico for statistical and geographic purposes. INEGI’s information comprises five series that provide the spatial distribution of land use until 1992 (Series I), from 1993 to 1996 (Series II), from 2000 to 2004 (Series III), from 2007 to 2010 (Series IV) and from 2011 to 2013 (Series V). From the analysis of these data, it was observed that, from 1992 to 2013, the terrains located upstream of Villahermosa mainly changed from pasture cover to agriculture cover.
Figure 2 shows thematic maps of land use that have been reconstructed from all the available land use data.
Table 2 shows the correspondence of land use types with their curve numbers, as well as the medium curve numbers for Series I and V.
To analyze the impact that changes in land use have on the inundation levels, the flood discharges for the return periods of 10, 25, 50 and 100 years were calculated using the curve numbers (
N) corresponding to the land uses of Series I (1992) and Series V (2011–2013).
Table 3 summarizes the parameters and coefficients used in Equation (
1). The effective precipitation depths and flood discharges calculated for each return period are shown in
Table 4.
3. Flood Inundation Model
The inundation scenarios in Villahermosa were modeled with the software Iber [
18]. This numerical model solves the 2D shallow water equations to compute the spatial distribution of the water depth and the two horizontal components of the depth-averaged velocity. The shallow water equations were solved with an explicit unstructured finite volume solver. The performance of the software Iber could not be validated in the study area because there are no available historical data to do so. However, the model has been extensively validated and applied in previous studies related to river inundation, tidal currents in estuaries, and rainfall–runoff modeling [
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27], showing its ability to represent 2D free surface shallow flows and river inundation processes. The 2D shallow water equations solved by the software Iber are a high-fidelity physically-based model, and they were assumed to be the best representation of the inundation process for the purposes of this work. The only parameter to calibrate in the equations is the Manning coefficient. Plausible values of this parameter can be established from River Engineering Manuals, considering the land uses in the study area. Those values are expected to give a good approximation of the inundation extent [
28,
29].
Figure 3 shows the location map of the area under study. In the figure, the city of Villahermosa plus water networks and water bodies are presented. The computation domain, which is delimited by a red line, extends over an area of 290 km
2. It encompasses the entire city and the rural areas surrounding it that have been most affected by historical inundation events.
The study area was discretized with an unstructured mesh to obtain different levels of spatial resolution in the different zones of the spatial domain. After some preliminary tests to evaluate the effect of the mesh size on the results, an unstructured triangular mesh of 281,289 elements was generated, with element sizes of 50 m in the urban areas, 100 m in the agricultural areas, and 15 m in the main river channels.
Three land uses were considered within the simulation domain to characterize surface roughness: urban, agricultural and river main channel. Given the dense and complex urbanization pattern of the city, it was not possible to define in the numerical model an explicit representation of buildings. As an alternative, the effect of buildings on drag resistance was accounted for using an augmented Manning coefficient to characterize the surface roughness in the urban districts. This kind of approach has been used in previous studies, such as by Liang et al. [
30], Neelz and Pender [
31] and Huang et al. [
32]. Here, we used the formulation proposed by Huang et al. [
32] to obtain the augmented Manning roughness based on the blockage percentage of buildings. From airborne photography, the buildings’ blockage percentage ratio was estimated to be 75–80%, which, according to the formulation of Huang et al. [
32], gives a Manning roughness of 0.20 in the urban area. In the agricultural areas and in the river’s main channel, the Manning coefficients used were set to 0.12 and 0.035, respectively.
5. Conclusions
Results show that, for relatively frequent inundation events (return periods up to 50 years), changes in the basin’s land use cause an increase of maximum water depths in the city of up to 1.5 m. For less frequent events (return periods of 50 and 100 years) the maximum increase of water depth is between 0.7 and 1 m. The areas most affected by the rise of flood levels are those located from the southwest to the east of the city (e.g., the urban areas of Tamulte, Miguel Hidalgo, Anacleto Canabal, Ixtacomitan and Gaviotas). Such results are in accordance with recent inundations caused by tropical weather events that have caused maximum water depths of over 1.5 m in some urban districts.
The estimations obtained in this study show that during storm events the increase in flood depths due to changes in land use in the basin can range from 7% to 22%, depending on the frequency of the storm event.
On the basis of existing estimations of the city’s growth rate, three possible urban expansion scenarios were proposed for 2050. Results show that, even in the most favorable scenario, flooding levels could increase by up to 0.3 m. In the worst scenario, inundation levels could rise by up to 0.7 m in areas already affected by floods every year. As stated by Zhang et al. [
33], urban/construction land will always increase the problem of flooding. In the case of Villahermosa, which is a center for business and administration for Mexico’s oil industry, as well as the connection between Mexico City and the largest cities in the southeast of the country, urban land increase will be a growing problem in years to come. It is important to note here that the present study does not consider climate change for the 2050 scenarios. According to Jenkins et al. [
34], climate change and the rapid urbanization will be the two main factors responsible for increased flood rates in the coming decades. For this reason, the application of an approach that determines the impact of climate change on the future flood scenarios in Villahermosa, similar to the one proposed by Liu et al. [
35], is a crucial aspect to be considered in further developments of this study.
The present study provides an indication of how much the flood levels are expected to increase if the expansion of the urban area continues in an uncontrolled manner. The model developed can be considered as a useful tool for future territorial planning and could be used to evaluate alternative measures to reduce river inundation hazard in Villahermosa. Those could include the design of new embankments and retaining walls within the city, or a more sustainable management of land uses in the basins located upstream of the city, to increase the infiltration capacity of the soils, and reduce the flood river discharges.