Post-fire hydrological response and suspended sediment transport of a terraced Mediterranean catchment
In July 2013, a wildfire severely affected the western part of the island of Mallorca (Spain). During the first three post-fire hydrological years, when the window of disturbance tends to be more open, the hydrological and sediment delivery processes and dynamics were assessed in a representative catchment intensively shaped by terracing that covered 37% of its surface area. A nested approach was applied with two gauging stations (covering 1.2 km2 and 4.8 km2) built in September 2013 that took continuous measurements of rainfall, water and sediment yield. Average Suspended Sediment Concentration (1,503 mg l-1) and the maximum peak (33,618 mg l-1) were two orders of magnitude higher than tho…
Effects of agricultural drainage systems on sediment connectivity in a small Mediterranean lowland catchment
Traditional drainage systems combining man-made channels and subsurface tile drains have been used since Roman times to control water excess in Mediterranean lowland regions, favouring adequate soil water regime for agriculture purposes. However, mechanization of agriculture, abandonment or land use changes lead to a progressive deterioration of these drains in the last decades. The effects of these structures on hydrological and sediment dynamics have been previously analyzed in a small Mediterranean lowland catchment (Can Revull, Mallorca, Spain, 1.4 km2) by establishing an integrated sediment budget with a multi-technique approach. Moreover, the recent advances in morphometric techniques…
Evaluating functional connectivity in a small agricultural catchment under contrasting flood events by using UAV
Spatial patterns of sediment connectivity in terraced lands: Anthropogenic controls of catchment sensitivity
In recent decades the dynamics of global change in developed countries has led to significant alterations in the hydrological and sediment dynamics of terraced land. Agricultural terraces were built to control overland flow and prevent erosion, acting as buffers and barriers throughout the sediment cascading system. Their abandonment and degradation increase the sensitivity of the catchment, promoting the collapse of dry-stone walls and the reworking of stored sediment. In this study, a geomorphometric Index of Connectivity (IC) –derived from high-resolution LiDAR data (0.9 pt m-2, RMSE Q8). This spatial matching was related to feedback dynamics between structural and functional connectivit…