Logo Repositorio Institucional

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dspace.ucuenca.edu.ec/handle/123456789/22025
Title: Forest impact on floods due to extreme rainfall and snowmelt in four Latin American environments 1: Field data analysis
Other Titles: Journal of Hydrology
Authors: Bathurst, James C.
Iroumé, Andrés
Cisneros, Felipe
Fallas, Jorge
Iturraspe, Rodolfo
Gaviño Novillo, Marcelo
Urciuolo, Adriana
De Bièvre, Bert
Guerrero Borges, V.
Gayoso, Jorge
Coello, Cristian
Miranda, Miriam
Ramírez, Marco
Keywords: Field Data
Forest
Floods
Forest Cover Change
Latinoamerica
River Catchments
Issue Date: 22-Jan-2011
metadata.dc.ucuenca.paginacion: Páginas 281-291
metadata.dc.description.numberSequence: 
volumen 400
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: doi: 10.1016 / j.jhydrol.2010.11.044
metadata.dc.description.city: 
Cuenca
metadata.dc.type: Article
Abstract: 
Flood peak data for focus catchments in Costa Rica, Ecuador, Chile and Argentina are analyzed to test the hypothesis that, as the size of the hydrological event increases, the effect of forest cover on the peak discharge becomes less important. Previous research suggests that this hypothesis may hold for small catchments (less than 1 km2) but the pattern is less clear for large catchments. The principal study results are for small paired catchments (0.6-10 km2) with different forest covers (forest/pasture) in highland Ecuador and a small (0.35 km2) plantation catchment in southern Chile subjected to logging. The former were analyzed by comparing the corresponding peak discharges for given rainfall events, the latter by comparing the relationships between peak discharge and rainfall event size for the pre- and post-logging periods. In all cases there is relative or absolute convergence of the responses as discharge increases, with convergence likely for flood return periods of around 10 years. More limited data for larger catchments which have undergone either deforestation or afforestation (131 km2 in Costa Rica and 94-1545 km2 in Chile) suggest that the percentage change in forest cover must exceed 20-30% to provoke a measurable response in peak discharge; convergence of peak discharge response at high flows (return periods of around 5 years) for the different forest covers may then be observed. For a 12.9-km2 snowmelt-affected catchment in Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, extreme floods require rain-on-snow events but the data are not sufficient to quantify the complex relationship between forest cover, event return period and peak discharge. In general, forest cover is unlikely to reduce, significantly, peak discharges generated by extreme rainfall but may still offer substantial mitigation benefits for moderate (i.e. more frequent) rainfall events.
URI: http://dspace.ucuenca.edu.ec/handle/123456789/22025
Appears in Collections:Artículos

Files in This Item:
File Description SizeFormat 
scopus 117.pdftexto completo614.96 kBAdobe PDFThumbnail
View/Open


This item is protected by original copyright



This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons

 

Centro de Documentacion Regional "Juan Bautista Vázquez"

Biblioteca Campus Central Biblioteca Campus Salud Biblioteca Campus Yanuncay
Av. 12 de Abril y Calle Agustín Cueva, Telf: 4051000 Ext. 1311, 1312, 1313, 1314. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H00-21H00. Sábados: 08H00-12H00 Av. El Paraíso 3-52, detrás del Hospital Regional "Vicente Corral Moscoso", Telf: 4051000 Ext. 3144. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H00-19H00 Av. 12 de Octubre y Diego de Tapia, antiguo Colegio Orientalista, Telf: 4051000 Ext. 3535 2810706 Ext. 116. Horario de atención: Lunes-Viernes: 07H30-19H00