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Sediment delivery linkages in a chaparral watershed following a wildfire
Authors:Burchard H Heede  Michael D Harvey  Jeffrey R Laird
Institution:(1) USDA, Forest Service Rocky Mountain Forest and Range Experiment Station Forestry Sciences Laboratory, Arizona State University Campus, 85287-1304 Tempe, Arizona, USA;(2) Earth Resources Department, Colorado State University, 80526 Fort Collins, Colorado, USA;(3) Present address: US Army Corps of Engineers, Medford, Oregon, USA
Abstract:The purpose of this research is to study the temporal and spatial sediment delivery to and within the stream network following a wildfire on a chaparral watershed in Arizona, USA. Methods include interpretation of channel processes (aggradation, degradation) from sequential aerial photographs, field measurements of sediment delivery, and overland flow from ten microwatersheds having different vegetation cover (no vegetation, chaparral cover, and bare with vegetation buffer strips). The response of the watershed to the fire was very complex. The fire reduced the chaparral cover to zero in most locations and severe erosion led to filling of the channels by sediment. With vegetation recovery, sediment delivery from the watershed practically ceased. Vegetation buffer strips were mainly responsible for arresting the sediment delivered from bare hillslopes. Relatively clear water, entering the channels, caused degradation in the tributaries that delivered the sediment into the main stream at El Oso Creek. Due to high water infiltration by immense volumes of sediment deposits in the middle reach, the sediment from the tributaries was deposited as in-channel fans. In contrast, the upper reach of El Oso Creek behaved similarly to the tributaries. It aggraded after the fire and was followed by degradation. The low reach of El Oso Creek is degrading because it is still adjusting base level to the incision of the master stream. Implications of this study are that land managers, concerned to avoid severe erosion and sedimentation following disturbance, should concentrate on the establishment and enhancement of vegetation buffer strips along channel banks.
Keywords:Erosion  Sedimentation  Geomorphic channel stages  Infiltration  Wildfires in chaparral
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