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Process-based modelling of erosion, sediment transport and reservoir siltation in mesoscale semi-arid catchments

  • To support scientifically sound water management in dryland environments a modelling system has been developed for the quantitative assessment of water and sediment fluxes in catchments, transport in the river system, and retention in reservoirs. The spatial scale of interest is the mesoscale because this is the scale most relevant for management of water and land resources. This modelling system comprises process-oriented hydrological components tailored for dryland characteristics coupled with components comprising hillslope erosion, sediment transport and reservoir deposition processes. The spatial discretization is hierarchically designed according to a multi-scale concept to account for particular relevant process scales. The non-linear and partly intermittent run-off generation and sediment dynamics are dealt with by accounting for connectivity phenomena at the intersections of landscape compartments. The modelling system has been developed by means of data from nested research catchments in NE-Spain and in NE-Brazil. In theTo support scientifically sound water management in dryland environments a modelling system has been developed for the quantitative assessment of water and sediment fluxes in catchments, transport in the river system, and retention in reservoirs. The spatial scale of interest is the mesoscale because this is the scale most relevant for management of water and land resources. This modelling system comprises process-oriented hydrological components tailored for dryland characteristics coupled with components comprising hillslope erosion, sediment transport and reservoir deposition processes. The spatial discretization is hierarchically designed according to a multi-scale concept to account for particular relevant process scales. The non-linear and partly intermittent run-off generation and sediment dynamics are dealt with by accounting for connectivity phenomena at the intersections of landscape compartments. The modelling system has been developed by means of data from nested research catchments in NE-Spain and in NE-Brazil. In the semi-arid NE of Brazil sediment retention along the topography is the main process for sediment retention at all scales, i.e. the sediment delivery is transport limited. This kind of deposition retains roughly 50 to 60 % of eroded sediment, maintaining a similar deposition proportion in all spatial scales investigated. On the other hand, the sediment retained in reservoirs is clearly related to the scale, increasing with catchment area. With increasing area, there are more reservoirs, increasing the possibility of deposition. Furthermore, the area increase also promotes an increase in flow volume, favouring the construction of larger reservoirs, which generally overflow less frequently and retain higher sediment fractions. The second example comprises a highly dynamic Mediterranean catchment in NE-Spain with nested sub-catchments and reveals the full dynamics of hydrological, erosion and deposition features. The run-off modelling performed well with only some overestimation during low-flow periods due to the neglect of water losses along the river. The simulated peaks in sediment flux are reproduced well, while low-flow sediment transport is less well captured, due to the disregard of sediment remobilization in the riverbed during low flow. This combined observation and modelling study deepened the understanding of hydro-sedimentological systems characterized by flashy run-off generation and by erosion and sediment transport pulses through the different landscape compartments. The connectivity between the different landscape compartments plays a very relevant role, regarding both the total mass of water and sediment transport and the transport time through the catchment.show moreshow less

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Author details:Axel BronstertORCiDGND, Jose-Carlos de AraujoORCiD, Ramon J. Batalla Villanueva, Alexandre Cunha Costa, José Miguel Martins DelgadoORCiDGND, Till FranckeORCiDGND, Saskia FörsterORCiDGND, Andreas Guentner, José Andrés Lopez-TarazonORCiDGND, George Leite Mamede, Pedro Henrique Augusto MedeirosORCiD, Eva Mueller, Damia Vericat
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1007/s11368-014-0994-1
ISSN:1439-0108
ISSN:1614-7480
Title of parent work (English):Journal of soils and sediments : protection, risk assessment and remediation
Publisher:Springer
Place of publishing:Heidelberg
Publication type:Article
Language:English
Year of first publication:2014
Publication year:2014
Release date:2017/03/27
Tag:Connectivity; Deposition; Erosion; Modelling; Sediment transfer; Semi-arid
Volume:14
Issue:12
Number of pages:18
First page:2001
Last Page:2018
Funding institution:Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [BR 1731/3, BR 1731/11, GU 987/5, FO 754/1]; Spanish Ministry of Science and Education [CSD2009-727 00065]; European Social Fund; Brazilian Ministry of Education (CAPES); Brazilian National Council for Scientific and Technical Development (CNPq); Spanish Ministry [RYC-2010-06264]
Organizational units:Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Geowissenschaften
Peer review:Referiert
Institution name at the time of the publication:Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät / Institut für Erd- und Umweltwissenschaften
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