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Limits of windthrow-driven hillslope sediment flux due to varying storm frequency and intensity
Geomorphology (2012)
  • Jose A. Constantine, Cardiff University
  • Mart-Jan Schelhaas
  • Emmanuel J. Gabet, San Jose State University
  • Simon M. Mudd, University of California, Santa Barbara
Abstract
The uprooting and toppling of trees during storms transports soil, exhumes bedrock, and thus influences the evolution of hillslopes. Given predicted increased storminess due to future climate change, we adapt a forest-gap model (ForGEM) to explore windthrow-driven sediment transport in a Douglas fir forest under increasingly severe wind regimes in order to better assess potential future impacts on soil erosion. Larger trees are more sensitive to wind loading and are therefore preferentially toppled as storm frequency and intensity increase. Because larger trees have larger root-plate volumes and can move large volumes of sediment, increased wind velocities lead to an increase in sediment flux. With increasingly stormier conditions, however, the proportion of large trees dwindles. The net effect of these two countervailing trends is that sediment transport increases as average annual rates of windthrow approach eight trees per hectare, but begins to decline thereafter. Our results highlight the complex relationship between climate and sediment transport, particularly when it is mediated by the biota.
Keywords
  • Climate change,
  • Hillslope diffusivity,
  • Forest-gap model,
  • Soil erosion,
  • Tree throw
Publication Date
November 15, 2012
DOI
10.1016/j.geomorph.2012.06.022
Publisher Statement
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Citation Information
Jose A. Constantine, Mart-Jan Schelhaas, Emmanuel J. Gabet and Simon M. Mudd. "Limits of windthrow-driven hillslope sediment flux due to varying storm frequency and intensity" Geomorphology Vol. 175-176 (2012) p. 66 - 73 ISSN: 0169-555X
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/emmanuel_gabet/35/