Redistribution of debris‐flow sediment following severe wildfire and floods in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, USA

Author:

Friedman Jonathan M.1ORCID,Tillery Anne C.2ORCID,Alfieri Samuel3,Skaggs Elizabeth1ORCID,Shafroth Patrick B.1,Allen Craig D.4

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Fort Collins Science Center Fort Collins CO USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey, New Mexico Water Science Center Albuquerque NM USA

3. Under contract to U.S. Geological Survey, Fort Collins Science Center Fort Collins CO USA

4. Department of Geography and Environmental Studies University of New Mexico Albuquerque NM USA

Abstract

AbstractSevere fire on steep slopes increases stormwater runoff and the occurrence of runoff‐initiated debris flows. Predicting locations of debris flows and their downstream effects on trunk streams requires watershed‐scale high‐resolution topographic data. Intense precipitation in July and September 2013 following the June 2011 Las Conchas Fire in the Jemez Mountains, New Mexico, led to widespread debris flows in the watershed of Rito de los Frijoles. We differenced lidar Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) collected in 2010 and 2016 to map subwatersheds experiencing debris flows and changes in elevation of the trunk stream. Debris flow occurrence was well predicted by previous assessments of debris‐flow hazard; debris flows occurred in 7 of 9 sub‐basins where the debris‐flow hazard was above 60% for the 25‐year rainfall event, and in 0 of 21 basins where debris flow hazard was less than 60%. Debris flows resulted in fan deposition at the confluence with the trunk stream followed by transport during three documented floods. The bed of the 22 km trunk stream increased in elevation by a mean of 0.29 m, but the local change in thalweg elevation was controlled by inputs of water and sediment and longitudinal variation in gradient. Downstream of the mouths of tributaries with debris flows, the thalweg of the trunk stream rose as much as 2 m. Downstream of the mouths of tributaries without debris flows the thalweg of the main stem degraded by as much as 2 m, mobilizing sediment that was then deposited further downstream where the gradient of the trunk stream decreases. In conclusion, the transport of sediment generated by debris flows was predictably related to spatial variation in sediment supply, discharge and gradient.

Funder

National Park Service

Publisher

Wiley

Reference64 articles.

1. Impact of anthropogenic climate change on wildfire across western US forests

2. Allen C.D.(1989)Changes in the landscape of the Jemez Mountains New Mexico. Ph.D. dissertation Dept. of Forestry and Natural Resources University of California Berkeley CA. 346 pp.

3. Paired charcoal and tree-ring records of high-frequency Holocene fire from two New Mexico bog sites

4. Effects of post-wildfire erosion on channel environments, Boise River, Idaho

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