4.7 Article

Disentangling the impacts of meteorological variability and human induced changes on hydrological responses and erosion in a hilly-gully watershed of the Chinese Loess Plateau

Journal

CATENA
Volume 233, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.catena.2023.107478

Keywords

Runoff events; Sediment transport; Check dams; Revegetation; Index of connectivity

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The study reveals that the implementation of soil and water conservation measures and anthropogenic activities can reduce water and sediment movement in water erosion areas, but the mechanisms of sediment dynamics may change under climate conditions. This knowledge is crucial for developing sustainable conservation plans and improving sedimentological models.
China's Loess Plateau remains one of the most serious water erosion areas on Earth, while runoff and sediments of the Yellow River continue to decrease due to soil and water conservation (SWC) measures. Besides, climate conditions are dynamic. A total of 197 rainfall-runoff events from 1965 to 2020 in the Huangfuchuan catchment, which were divided into 3 sub-periods (P0: 1965 - 1982 limited measures; P1: 1983-1998 only dams and P2: 1999-2020 dams and revegetation), were selected to reveal the differences and mechanisms of runoff generation and sediment dynamics. The results show that: 1) anthropogenic activities played a leading role in water and sediment reduction; 2) infiltration-excess overland flow during the first two periods was dominant mechanism, but the results imply a potential shift towards saturation-excess overland flow occurring more often during P2; 3) the studied system, in a highly erodible region, is transport-limited; 4) sediment connectivity is reduced noticeably at the catchment scale, in which the decrease in index of connectivity (IC) values mainly resulted from the increase in proportion of the most disconnected areas of the catchment, especially in P2. These findings can help towards a better understanding of the mechanisms behind the changes in sediment dynamics, which can be applied to develop and implement sustainable water and soil conservation planning in the local or other similar areas. Besides this knowledge is very important for improving hydrological and sedimentological models in order to forecast the effects of human induced changes.

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