4.7 Article

Predicting Patagonian Landslides: Roles of Forest Cover and Wind Speed

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GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
卷 48, 期 23, 页码 -

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021GL095224

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  1. Agencia Nacional de Investigacion y Desarrollo, Chile (ANID)
  2. German Academic Exchange Service, Germany (DAAD)
  3. Projekt DEAL

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This study explores the impact of forest cover and wind speed on landslides in the temperate rainforests of Chilean Patagonia. The research finds that higher crown openness and wind speeds predict higher probabilities of detecting landslides, especially in low-order channels and midslope locations. Wind speed has less predictive power in areas impacted by recent volcanic eruptions, while forest cover remains influential in terms of crown openness.
Dense tree stands and high wind speeds characterize the temperate rainforests of southern Chilean Patagonia, where landslides frequently strip hillslopes of soils, rock, and biomass. Assuming that wind loads on trees promote slope instability, we explore the role of forest cover and wind speed in predicting landslides with a hierarchical Bayesian logistic regression. We find that higher crown openness and wind speeds credibly predict higher probabilities of detecting landslides regardless of topographic location, though much better in low-order channels and on midslope locations than on open slopes. Wind speed has less predictive power in areas that were impacted by tephra fall from recent volcanic eruptions, while the influence of forest cover in terms of crown openness remains. Plain Language Summary Chilean Patagonia hosts some of Earth's largest swaths of temperate rainforests, where frequent landslides erode soil, rock, and vegetation. We explore the role of forest cover and wind disturbances in promoting such landslides with a model that predicts from crown openness and wind speed the probability of detecting landslide terrain. We find that both forest cover and wind speed play important, yet previously underappreciated, roles in this context, especially when grouped by landform types and previous volcanic disturbance, which may override the comparable modest control of wind on landslides. Our study is the first of its kind in one of the windiest spots on Earth and encourages a more discerning approach to landslide prediction.

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