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Rill erosion in natural and disturbed forests: 2. Modeling Approaches

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TLDR
In this article, the authors report model parameters based on 66 simulated runoff experiments in two disturbed forests in the northwestern U.S. In these environments the erosion rates were clearly limited, and the rill erodibility parameters calculated from four hydraulic variables increased by orders of magnitude.
Abstract
[1] As forest management scenarios become more complex, the ability to more accurately predict erosion from those scenarios becomes more important. In this second part of a two-part study we report model parameters based on 66 simulated runoff experiments in two disturbed forests in the northwestern U.S. The 5 disturbance classes were natural, 10-month old and 2-week old low soil burn severity, high soil burn severity, and logging skid trails. In these environments the erosion rates were clearly detachment limited, and the rill erodibility parameters calculated from four hydraulic variables increased by orders of magnitude. The soil shear stress based erodibility parameter, Kr, was 1.5 × 10−6 s m−1in the natural plots, 2.0 × 10−4 s m−1 in the high soil burn severity plots, and 1.7 × 10−3 s m−1 in the skid trail plots; Kr values for the low soil burn severity plots had negative sign. The erodibility value for the skid trail plots fell within ranges reported for tilled agricultural fields and also for forest roads. The Kr values decreased as erosion occurred in the plots and therefore should not be a constant parameter. The stream power produced the largest R2 value (0.41) when hydraulic predictors and the sediment flux were log-transformed, but none of the four hydraulic variables (soil shear stress, stream power, unit stream power, and unit length shear force) explained much of the variability in sediment flux rates across the five levels of disturbance when evaluated in the linear form of the erosion models under consideration.

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Current research issues related to post-wildfire runoff and erosion processes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors identify and quantify functional relations between metrics of fire effects and soil hydraulic properties that will better represent the dynamic and transient conditions after a wildfire and determine the interaction between burned landscapes and temporally and spatially variable meso-scale precipitation, which is often the primary driver of post-wildfire runoff and erosion processes.
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Post-fire mulching for runoff and erosion mitigation Part I: Effectiveness at reducing hillslope erosion rates

TL;DR: In this article, the ability of mulch treatments to reduce sediment yields from natural rainfall and resulting overland flow was measured using hillslope plots on areas burned at high severity following four wildfires in the western United States.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prediction of spatially explicit rainfall intensity–duration thresholds for post-fire debris-flow generation in the western United States

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a new, fully predictive approach that utilizes rainfall, hydrologic response, and readily available geospatial data to predict rainfall intensity-duration thresholds for debris-flow generation in recently burned locations in the western United States.
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Concentrated flow erodibility for physically based erosion models: Temporal variability in disturbed and undisturbed rangelands

TL;DR: In this article, concentrated flow simulations on disturbed and undisturbed rangelands were used to estimate the erodibility and evaluate the performance of linear and power law equations that describe the relationship between erosion rate and several hydraulic parameters.
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Post‐fire bedload sediment delivery across spatial scales in the interior western United States

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors developed relationships for post-fire bedload sediment delivery rates for spatial scales up to 117'ha using sediment yield data from six published studies and two recently established study sites.
References
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Book

An introduction to statistical methods and data analysis

R. Lyman Ott.
TL;DR: In this article, the Chi-square test of homogeneity of proportions is used to compare the proportions of different groups of individuals in a population to a single variable, and the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test is used for the comparison of different proportions.
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A Process-Based Soil Erosion Model for USDA-Water Erosion Prediction Project Technology

TL;DR: In this paper, a model was developed for estimating soil erosion by water on hillslopes for use in new USDA erosion prediction technology. Detachment, transport, and deposition processes were represented.
Journal ArticleDOI

The European Soil Erosion Model (EUROSEM): A dynamic approach for predicting sediment transport from fields and small catchments.

TL;DR: The European Soil Erosion Model (EUROSEM) as mentioned in this paper is a dynamic distributed model able to simulate sediment transport, erosion and deposition over the land surface by rill and interill processes in single storms for both individual fields and small catchments.
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