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Published July 29, 2011 | Published
Journal Article Open

A model for fire‐induced sediment yield by dry ravel in steep landscapes

Abstract

Sediment flux from hillslopes to channels commonly increases following wildfires, with implications for the carbon cycle, river habitats, and debris-flow hazards. Although much of this material is transported via dry ravel, existing ravel models are not applicable to hillslopes with gradients greater than the angle of repose, which can constitute the majority of mountainous terrain. To fill this knowledge gap, we develop a continuity model for sediment storage by vegetation dams on steep hillslopes to predict sediment yields following wildfire. The maximum volume of sediment stored prior to wildfire is set to be a function of vegetation density, the capacity of plants to impound sediment, and the contributing hillslope area. Time is required after fire to establish vegetation and replenish hillslope sediment storage, which introduces vegetation regrowth rate, soil production rate, and fire recurrence interval as important variables that affect ravel yield. Model results for the San Gabriel Mountains, California, predict that sediment yield can increase by several orders of magnitude following fire. These results are consistent with field data of ravel yield (~30 mm per contributing area of hillslope in 5 months) we collected following the 2009 Station Fire, as well as postfire sediment flux recorded by 93 debris basins. In contrast to previous work, our model shows that heightened postfire sediment yields can be explained by a change in hillslope sediment storage independent of major changes in the soil production rate and landscape form over geomorphic timescales.

Additional Information

© 2011 American Geophysical Union. Received 8 September 2010; revised 19 April 2011; accepted 28 April 2011; published 29 July 2011. Funding for the work was provided by NSF EAR‐0922199 grant to M.P.L. and the California Institute of Technology. The digital topographic data was collected by the National Center for Airborne Laser Mapping. Parts of the research presented were completed as part of Ge126 at Caltech, and the authors are grateful to class participants Janet Harvey, Mariya Levina, Ben Mackey, and Will Steinhardt. We thank Mike Oxford for facilitating access to the U.S. Forest Service records on wildfire history in the San Gabriel Mountains and Youssef Chebabi and Los Angeles County for providing debris basin data. Jerome Lavé kindly provided data compiled from his 2004 study. We are grateful to Sue Cannon, Jon Stock, Kevin Schmidt, and Jon Wilson for informal discussions and advice. Two reviewers and the Editor provided valuable comments that strengthened the final manuscript.

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