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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Assessment of Gully Erosion Susceptibility Using Multivariate Adaptive Regression Splines and Accounting for Terrain Connectivity

Mariaelena CamaEdoardo RotiglianoValerio AgnesiNathalie Alamaru Caraballo-ariasChristian Conoscenti

subject

HydrologygeographyMultivariate adaptive regression splinesgeography.geographical_feature_category010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesReceiver operating characteristicCalibration (statistics)Drainage basinSoil ScienceTerrainGully erosionDevelopment010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesEnvironmental ChemistryEnvironmental scienceArea under the roc curveDrainage density0105 earth and related environmental sciencesGeneral Environmental Science

description

In this work, we assessed gully erosion susceptibility in two adjacent cultivated catchments of Sicily (Italy) by employing multivariate adaptive regression splines (MARS) and a set of geo-environmental variables. To explore the influence of hydrological connectivity on gully occurrence we measured the changes of performance occurred when adding one by one nine predictors reflecting terrain connectivity to a base model that included contributing area and slope gradient. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and the area under the ROC curve (AUC) were used to evaluate models performance. Gully predictive models were trained in both the catchments and submitted to internal (in the calibration catchment) and external (in the adjacent one) validation, using samples extracted both from all cells of the catchments and only from cells located along flow concentration axes. Model evaluation on the entire catchments shows outstanding predictive performance of models that either include or do not include the predictors selected to reflect potential hydrological connectivity. Conversely, AUC values measured on flow concentration axes reveals that almost all the additional predictors improve the performance of the base model, but the most enhanced increase of accuracy occurs when upstream drainage density of each landscape position is included as predictor of gully occurrence.

https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.2772