Hydrological modeling of flood impacts under land use and land cover change: A systematic review of tools, trends, and challenges

Journal article


Authors/Editors


Strategic Research Themes


Publication Details

Author listTin Zar Oo , Usa Wannasingha Humphries

PublisherElsevier

Publication year2026

Volume number16

Start page1

End page14

Number of pages14

ISSN22150161

eISSN2215-0161

URLhttps://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2215016125005680?via%3Dihub

LanguagesEnglish-Great Britain (EN-GB)


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Abstract

Land use and land cover (LULC) change is a major anthropogenic factor influencing flood behavior and hydrological processes. This systematic review synthesizes two decades (2005–2025) of research on hydrological modeling approaches used to assess flood responses under LULC transitions. A total of 114 publications were retrieved from the Scopus database, and after applying PRISMA-based screening, 78 peer-reviewed studies were analyzed using bibliometric and content mapping. The review categorizes hydrological models by spatial scale, process representation, and sensitivity to LULC dynamics. Findings consistently indicate that urban expansion, deforestation, and vegetation loss intensify surface runoff, peak flow, and flood frequency. Despite advancements, significant challenges remain particularly related to data scarcity, model calibration, and the limited integration of socio-economic variables. Emerging tools such as Remote Sensing (RS), Geographic Information Systems (GIS), and machine learning especially within platforms like Google Earth Engine (GEE) enhance LULC detection accuracy and flood prediction capability. The study proposes an integrated decision framework linking bibliometric trends with model selection strategies, enabling researchers to align model choice with data availability and landscape characteristics. Overall, this review emphasizes the importance of interdisciplinary, data-driven modeling to strengthen flood resilience in rapidly transforming land systems.


Keywords

Bibliometric analysisFlood dynamicsHydrological modelsLand use and land cover changePRISMA guidelines


Last updated on 2026-08-01 at 00:00