4.7 Article

Effectiveness of soil erosion barriers to reduce sediment connectivity at small basin scale in a fire-affected forest

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 278, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2020.111510

Keywords

Forest fire; Post-fire practices; Sediment connectivity; Drone images; Small basin

Funding

  1. project SPECTORS - INTERREG V-A Deutschland-Nederland
  2. European COST Action FIRElinks Fire in the Earth System: Science & Society (European Union Framework Programme Horizon 2020) [CA18135]
  3. Short-Term Scientific Mission (STSM)

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This study evaluates the effects of post-fire management practices on the hydrological response of hillslopes in a Mediterranean forest, focusing on the impact of log erosion barriers and Easy-Barriers on structural sediment connectivity. The results show that these barriers remain effective in reducing sediment connectivity even on steeper slopes, contributing significantly to the overall decrease in SC compared to vegetation recovery.
Forest fires and post-fire management practices (PFMP) cause changes in the hydrological response of a hillslope. This study evaluates the effect of log erosion barriers (LB) and Easy-Barriers (R) (EB) on the spatial patterns and values of structural sediment connectivity (SC) in a Mediterranean mountainous pine forest affected by an arson fire in August 2017. A drone flight was done in July 2019 (23 months after the fire and 11 months after the PFMP) to obtain a high-resolution orthomosaic and DEM (at 0.05 m). Two contrasted areas, with and without PFMP, were selected along the same hillslope and 26 small basins were identified: 16 in the treated area (mean area, slope and vegetation recovery of 916 m(2), 60% and 25%; with 94 LB and 39 EB) and 10 in the untreated area (1952 m(2), 75% and 20%). The aggregated index of sediment connectivity (AIC) was chosen to compute SC in three temporal scenarios: Before and just after the fire and when all PFMP were implemented including the incipient vegetation recovery. Output normalization allowed the comparison of the non-nested basins among them. After accounting the intrinsic differences among the basins and areas, and the temporal changes of SC between the three scenarios, the contribution of the barriers was estimated in 27% from the total decrease of SC in the treated area (8.5%). The remaining 73% was explained by the vegetation recovery. The effectiveness of the LB (11.3% on average) and EB (13.4%) did not diminish with increasing slope gradients. These percentages become relevant considering the small area affected by the LB (2.8%) and EB (1.3%). Independent metrics (convergence index, flow width, flat areas and LS factor) also reported clear differences between the two areas-higher soil erosive intensity in the untreated area- and in accordance with the AIC results.

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