JOURNAL OF HYDROLOGY | 卷:580 |
Utility of satellite-derived burn severity to study short- and long-term effects of wildfire on streamflow at the basin scale | |
Article | |
Moreno, Hernan A.1  Gourley, Jonathan J.2  Pham, Tri G.3  Spade, Daniela M.1  | |
[1] Univ Oklahoma, Sarkeys Energy Ctr, Dept Geog & Environm Sustainabil, Norman, OK 73072 USA | |
[2] NOAA, Natl Severe Storms Lab, 120 David L Boren Blvd, Norman, OK 73072 USA | |
[3] Univ Oklahoma, Sarkeys Energy Ctr, Sch Civil Engn & Environm Sci, Norman, OK 73072 USA | |
关键词: Wildfire hydrology; Remote sensing hydrology; Normalized Burn Ratio; Post-fire streamflow shifts; Forest hydrology; Land cover change; | |
DOI : 10.1016/j.jhydrol.2019.124244 | |
来源: Elsevier | |
【 摘 要 】
We investigated the changes in hydrologic response in a forested catchment impacted by wildfire in Colorado U.S.A. from the storm event to the inter-annual scales. We also evaluated the utility of a remotely-sensed burn severity index to study post-fire shifts in streamflow. At the storm-scale, we evaluated hydrologic shifts through changes in the effective runoff (Q*/P-Tot), peak streamflow (Q(pk)) and response time (T-R/T-B) from multiple hydrographs, while at seasonal and inter-annual-scales we quantified hydrologic shifts through the runoff fraction (Q/P-Tot) and flow duration curves. Vegetation anomalies were monitored through comparisons of the Normalized Burn Ratio (NBR) between the burned and a hydrologically-similar, forested, neighboring, unburned catchment. We found short-term acute and long-term chronic transient streamflow shifts from the minute to the inter-annual scales. Flow duration curves indicate an order of magnitude increase in maximum flows. Event-average Q*/P-Tot rot increased by two orders of magnitude and Q(pk) increased by one order of magnitude relative to multiple representative pre-fire events of similar precipitation intensities. Decreases in T-R/T-B appear to be minimal. At the inter-annual scale, increases in the difference between simultaneous unburned and burned NBR are associated with increases in Q/P-Tot. A hydrologic recovery pathway is evident resembling a hysteresis effect driven by vegetation re-growth. Results illustrate the non-steady physical processes that increase flash-flooding risks post-fire in mountainous catchments and the utility of Delta NBR as a hydrologic predictor in ungauged watersheds.
【 授权许可】
Free
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
10_1016_j_jhydrol_2019_124244.pdf | 7638KB | download |