Publication | Open Access
Sensitivity, Hazard, and Vulnerability of Farmlands to Saltwater Intrusion in Low-Lying Coastal Areas of Venice, Italy
29
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
Urban-coastal InteractionEngineeringSoil SalinityHydrologic HazardOceanographyCoastal WaterEarth ScienceHazard Status ConceptualizationCoastal FloodingPrevious Vulnerability AssessmentsHydrogeologyLow-lying Coastal AreasSubsurface HydrologyGeographyHydrologyCoastal ManagementTransitional WaterWater ResourcesSaltwater IntrusionLand SubsidenceGroundwater ManagementFlood Risk ManagementCoastal Pollution
Saltwater intrusion is a growing threat for coastal aquifers and agricultural practices in low-lying plains. Most of the farmlands located between the margin of the Southern Venice lagoon and the Northern Po delta, Italy, lie a few meters below mean sea level and are drained by a large network of artificial channels and hydraulic infrastructures to avoid frequent flooding and allow agricultural practices. This work proposes an assessment of the vulnerability to saltwater intrusion, following a new concept of the hazard status, resulting in combining the depth of the freshwater/saltwater interface and the electrical resistivity of the shallow subsoil. The sensitivity of the farmland system was assessed by using ground elevation, distance from freshwater and saltwater sources, permeability, potential runoff, land subsidence, and sea-level rise indicators. Relative weights were assigned by a pairwise comparison following the Analytic Hierarchy Process approach. The computed vulnerability map highlights that about 30% of the farmlands is under strong and extreme conditions, 28% between marginal and moderate, and 40% under negligible conditions. Results from previous vulnerability assessments are discussed in order to explain their differences in terms of hazard status conceptualization and sensitivity characterization of farmland system.
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