4.7 Article

The statistical power of post-fire soil-hydraulic property studies: Are we collecting sufficient infiltration measurements after wildland fires

相关参考文献

注意:仅列出部分参考文献,下载原文获取全部文献信息。
Article Environmental Sciences

Post-fire temporal trends in soil-physical and -hydraulic properties and simulated runoff generation: Insights from different burn severities in the 2013 Black Forest Fire, CO, USA

Brian A. Ebel et al.

Summary: Burn severity has a significant impact on soil-hydraulic properties after wildfires, influencing soil-physical properties and ground cover composition. However, the trends in soil-hydraulic properties were found to be less affected by initial burn severity, highlighting the complex relationships between burn severity, soil properties, and infiltration models.

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT (2022)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Hydrological and sedimentological changes following the 2010-forest fire in the Nahal Oren Basin, Mt. Carmel Israel-a comparison to pre-fire natural rates

Noam Greenbaum et al.

Summary: The study found that wildfires significantly impact the hydrological and sedimentological characteristics of the basin, leading to an increase in flow events, peak flow and duration, shortened base flows, and significantly increased suspended sediment concentrations. However, over time, these indicators gradually return to pre-fire levels.

CATENA (2021)

Article Environmental Sciences

How to take representative samples to quantify microplastic particles in soil?

Yingxue Yu et al.

Summary: The study finds a strong non-linear relationship between the representative elementary volume (REV) and the required number of samples to quantify plastic concentrations as the plastic concentration increases. It recommends taking replicated samples as large as possible and reducing the soil volume using the quartering method for accurate measurement of plastic concentrations.

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT (2021)

Article Water Resources

Water Infiltration after Prescribed Fire and Soil Mulching with Fern in Mediterranean Forests

Bruno Gianmarco Carra et al.

Summary: Prescribed fire is commonly used in Mediterranean forests to reduce wildfire risk, but the hydrological response of soil after fire can vary. Short-term mulching with fern can limit runoff increases, especially in broadleaves forests. However, the effectiveness of fern mulch treatment has not been evaluated extensively in literature. This study found that mulching post-fire can control hydrological effects, especially in broadleaves forests, but caution is needed in conifer forests.

HYDROLOGY (2021)

Article Water Resources

Parameter estimation for multiple post-wildfire hydrologic models

Brian A. Ebel et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

Quantifying the Effect of Subcritical Water Repellency on Sorptivity: A Physically Based Model

R. M. Shillito et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2020)

Article Environmental Sciences

Changes in soil hydraulic conductivity after prescribed fires in Mediterranean pine forests

P. A. Plaza-Alvarez et al.

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT (2019)

Article Geography, Physical

Impacts of successive wildfire on soil hydraulic properties: Implications for debris flow hazards and system resilience

Luke A. McGuire et al.

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS (2019)

Article Water Resources

Sources of inherent infiltration variability in postwildfire soils

John A. Moody et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2019)

Article Forestry

Post-fire water-quality response in the western United States

Ashley J. Rust et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2018)

Article Environmental Sciences

Fire, Flood, and Drought: Extreme Climate Events Alter Flow Paths and Stream Chemistry

Sheila F. Murphy et al.

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-BIOGEOSCIENCES (2018)

Article Water Resources

Recovery of small-scale infiltration and erosion after wildfires

Sierra S. Larson-Nash et al.

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY AND HYDROMECHANICS (2018)

Article Water Resources

Does fire alter soil water repellency in subtropical coastal sandy environments?

Amy M. White et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2017)

Article Water Resources

Synthesis of soil-hydraulic properties and infiltration timescales in wildfire-affected soils

Brian A. Ebel et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2017)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Debris flow initiation by runoff in a recently burned basin: Is grain-by-grain sediment bulking or en masse failure to blame?

Luke A. McGuire et al.

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS (2017)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Infiltration and interrill erosion rates after a wildfire in western Montana, USA

Peter R. Robichaud et al.

CATENA (2016)

Article Forestry

Relations between soil hydraulic properties and burn severity

John A. Moody et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2016)

Article Environmental Sciences

Scale-dependency of effective hydraulic conductivity on fire-affected hillslopes

Christoph Langhans et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2016)

Article Environmental Sciences

Effects of aridity in controlling the magnitude of runoff and erosion after wildfire

Philip J. Noske et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2016)

Article Engineering, Environmental

Wildfire and the Future of Water Supply

Kevin D. Bladon et al.

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY (2014)

Article Water Resources

Infiltration and runoff generation processes in fire-affected soils

John A. Moody et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2014)

Article Forestry

The temporal evolution of wildfire ash and implications for post-fire infiltration

Victoria N. Balfour et al.

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF WILDLAND FIRE (2014)

Article Engineering, Geological

Comparison of debris-flow volumes from burned and unburned areas

Paul Santi et al.

LANDSLIDES (2013)

Article Environmental Sciences

Wildfire and Aspect Effects on Hydrologic States after the 2010 Fourmile Canyon Fire

Brian A. Ebel

VADOSE ZONE JOURNAL (2013)

Article Environmental Sciences

Hydrologic conditions controlling runoff generation immediately after wildfire

Brian A. Ebel et al.

WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH (2012)

Article Computer Science, Interdisciplinary Applications

A distributed framework for multi-risk assessment of natural hazards used to model the effects of forest fire on hydrology and sediment yield

C. Isabella Bovolo et al.

COMPUTERS & GEOSCIENCES (2009)

Article Engineering, Civil

Linking hydraulic properties of fire-affected soils to infiltration and water repellency

John A. Moody et al.

JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY (2009)

Article Soil Science

Correlation between Air Permeability and Saturated Hydraulic Conductivity: Unburned and Burned Soils

Karletta Chief et al.

SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL (2008)

Article Geosciences, Multidisciplinary

Hydrological properties of a Mediterranean soil burned with different fire intensities

O. Gonzalez-Pelayo et al.

CATENA (2006)

Article Water Resources

Post-fire runoff and erosion from simulated rainfall on small plots, Colorado Front Range

J Benavides-Solorio et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2001)

Article Water Resources

Comparison of soil infiltration rates in burned and unburned mountainous watersheds

DA Martin et al.

HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES (2001)