Increased nonstationarity of stormflow threshold behaviors in a forested watershed due to abrupt earthquake disturbance
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Published:2023-08-14
Issue:15
Volume:27
Page:3005-3020
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ISSN:1607-7938
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Container-title:Hydrology and Earth System Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Hydrol. Earth Syst. Sci.
Author:
Zhang GuotaoORCID, Cui Peng, Gualtieri CarloORCID, Bazai Nazir Ahmed, Zhang Xueqin, Zhang Zhengtao
Abstract
Abstract. Extreme earthquake disturbances to the vegetation of local and regional
landscapes could swiftly impair the former hydrologic function,
significantly increasing the challenge of predicting threshold behaviors of
rainfall–runoff processes as well as the hydrologic system's complexity over
time. It is still unclear how alternating catchment hydrologic behaviors
under an ongoing large earthquake disruption are mediated by long-term
interactions between landslides and vegetation evolution. In a well-known watershed affected by the Wenchuan
earthquake, the nonlinear hydrologic behavior is examined
using two thresholds with intervening linear segments. A lower rising threshold (THr)
value (210.48 mm) observed in post-earthquake local landslide regions
exhibited a faster stormflow response rate than that in undisturbed
forest and grassland–shrubland regions, easily triggering huge flash-flood
disasters. Additionally, an integrated response metric pair (integrated
watershed average generation threshold THg−IWA and rising threshold THr−IWA) with areas of disparate land use,
ecology, and physiography was proposed and efficiently applied to identify
emergent catchment hydrologic behaviors. The interannual variation in the two
integrated hydrologic thresholds before and following the earthquake was assessed to
detect the temporal nonstationarity in hydrologic extremes and nonlinear
runoff response. The year 2011 was an important turning point along the
hydrologic disturbance–recovery timescale following the earthquake, as
post-earthquake landslide evolution reached a state of extreme
heterogeneity in space. At that time, the THr−IWA value decreased by
∼ 9 mm compared with the pre-earthquake level. This is closely
related to the fast expansion of landslides, leading to a larger extension of
variable source area from the channel to neighboring hillslopes, and faster
subsurface stormflow, contributing to flash floods. Finally, we present a
conceptual model interpreting how the short- and long-term interactions between
earthquake-induced landslides and vegetation affect flood hydrographs at
event timescale that generated an increased nonstationary hydrologic
behavior. This study expands our current knowledge of threshold-based
hydrologic and nonstationary stormflow behaviors in response to abrupt
earthquake disturbance for the prediction of future flood regimes.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China National Key Research and Development Program of China National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talents China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Engineering,General Environmental Science
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