Impact of soil properties on water and sediment transport: a case study at a small catchment in the Loess Plateau
2019
Ran, Qihua | Hong, Yanyan | Chen, Xiuxiu | Gao, Jihui | Ye, Sheng
The changes of soil properties caused by ecosystem restoration have played critical roles in controlling water and sediment loss in Loess Plateau. However, it is difficult to isolate and quantify the individual impact of each factor as the impact is hard to monitor separately. The objectives of this study are to explore how the changes in different soil properties influence the hydrologic response and sediment transport at catchment scale. We applied a coupled hydrologic-sediment transport model to a small catchment in the Loess Plateau. Sensitivity analyses were conducted on three influential soil properties: saturated hydraulic conductivity (Ks), Manning’s roughness coefficient (n) and the variations of erodibility coefficient (φ). Our results indicated that the increase in near surface saturated hydraulic conductivity could effectively reduce the peak and total flow (i.e. when Ks is smaller than rainfall intensity, 22.5% increase in Ks leads to over 70% reduction in total discharge), and could lead to transition of runoff generation mechanism from Horton Overland Flow to Dunne Overland Flow. The increase in Manning’s roughness coefficient would also reduce the discharge and sediment yield substantially by slowing down the flow velocity which leads to more infiltration along the flow path after the runoff is generated. The decrease in erodibility coefficient reduces the sediment rate and total sediment mass delivered (i.e. 20% decrease can reduce total sediment mass by 5%), alleviating the undercutting in upstream gullies and deposition at downstream, eventually slowing down landscape evolution. Our findings could be used to provide valuable guidance in the ecosystem restoration and land use management.
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