Contribution of intercepted subsurface flow to road runoff and sediment transport in a logging-disturbed tropical catchment
Negishi, J.N. ; Sidle, R.C. ; Ziegler, A.D. ; Noguchi, S. ; Rahim, N.A.
Negishi, J.N.
Sidle, R.C.
Noguchi, S.
Rahim, N.A.
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Abstract
Hydrological and sediment fluxes were monitored for a 1 yr period in a tropical headwater catchment where a 3 yr old logging road caused substantial Hortonian overland flow (HOF) and intercepted subsurface flow (ISSF). On a 51.5 m road section, ISSF became an increasingly important component of total road runoff, up to more than 90% for large storms. The proportion of ISSF contributed by road cuts along more or less planar slopes compared with ISSF from a zero-order basin (convergent slopes) truncated by the road declined with increasing rainfall. During the monitored storms that generated ISSF along the road, on average, 28% of sediment export and 79% of runoff from the road section were directly attributable to ISSF. Estimates of total sediment export from the road surface (170 t ha-1 yr-1) and suspended sediment export from the logging-disturbed catchment (4 t ha-1 yr-1) were exceptionally high despite 3 yr of recovery. ISSF caused not only additional road-generated sediment export, but also exacerbated HOF-driven erosion by creating a poor foundation for vegetation recovery on the road surface. Copyright © 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
Keywords
Cutbank seepage, Hydrogeomorphic controls, Logging impacts, Sediment yield, Tropics
Source Title
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms
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Series/Report No.
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Date
2008-07
DOI
10.1002/esp.1606
Type
Article