Assessing Relative Gully Morphometric Change After Extreme Rainfall Events: A UAV- Based GIS Framework Applied to the 2024 DANA in Southern Spain
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rodrigo Comino, Jesús; González Moreno, María Teresa; Moreno-Cuenca, Lucía; Cambronero-Ruiz, Laura; Senciales González, José MaríaEditorial
John Wiley & Sons
Materia
Extreme rainfall events GIS based framework Gully systems
Fecha
2026-02-23Referencia bibliográfica
Rodrigo-Comino, Jesús & González-Moreno, María Teresa & Moreno Cuenca, Lucía & Cambronero Ruiz, Laura & Senciales, José. (2026). Assessing Relative Gully Morphometric Change After Extreme Rainfall Events: A UAV‐Based GIS Framework Applied to the 2024 DANA in Southern Spain. Transactions in GIS. 30. https://doi.org/10.1111/tgis.70214
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades - (PID2023-152656OB-I00)Resumen
Climate change is intensifying the frequency and impact of extreme weather events, particularly in vulnerable Mediterranean
environments. This study investigates relative morphometric changes within a gully system in the Guadalmedina River basin
(Málaga, southern Spain) triggered by the 2024 DANA (Depresión Aislada en Niveles Altos), a high- impact convective event
that severely affected eastern and southern Spain. UAV- based photogrammetric surveys conducted before and after the DANA
event were used to generate high- resolution Digital Elevation Models (DEMs). These datasets were analyzed within an inte
grated GIS- based framework designed for relative morphometric change detection. A consistent structure- from- motion work
flow was applied to both surveys, and vegetation filtering techniques were implemented to isolate the bare- earth surface and
support gully- scale analysis. A suite of 13 geomorphometric variables derived from the DEMs was extracted using SAGA GIS,
including slope, curvature metrics, topographic indices, and hydrological descriptors. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was
employed as an exploratory multivariate tool to synthesize correlated terrain variables and to identify dominant morphometric
gradients before and after the extreme event. Results reveal substantial relative topographic reorganization following the DANA,
including enhanced incision, changes in slope and curvature patterns, and redistribution of erosion–deposition processes. PCA
results highlight a core set of influential variables governing gully morphology, while also indicating post- event shifts in terrain
organization associated with concentrated runoff and sediment mobilization. Beyond the specific case study, this work demon
strates the potential of UAV- derived geomorphometry combined with multivariate GIS analysis to support post- event landscape
assessment and climate adaptation studies. The proposed framework is transferable to other environments affected by extreme
hydroclimatic forcing and provides a robust approach for analyzing short- term geomorphological responses to climate extremes
at high spatial resolution.





