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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Effects of vegetation cover on sediment particle size distribution and transport processes in natural rainfall conditions on post-fire hillslope plots in South Korea

Ewane Basil Ewane A B and Heon-Ho Lee A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Forest Resources, College of Natural Resources, Yeungnam University, 280 Daehak-ro, Gyeongsan-si, Gyeongsangbuk-do 712-749, South Korea.

B Corresponding author. Email: ewa4two@ynu.ac.kr

Soil Research 54(8) 937-948 https://doi.org/10.1071/SR16117
Submitted: 3 May 2016  Accepted: 10 June 2016   Published: 20 September 2016

Abstract

Sediments were collected from four slow vegetation recovery plots, six fast vegetation recovery plots and five unburned plots at a post-fire site on a rainfall event basis and sorted for size distribution. The aim was to evaluate the effects of vegetation cover, soil aggregate stability, slope and rainfall intensity on sediment size distribution, transport selectivity and erosion processes between the burned and unburned treatment plots. Sediment detachment and transport mechanisms and the particle size transport selectivity of the eroded sediment were assessed based on enrichment ratios (ER) and mean weighted diameter (MWD) methods. The most eroded particle size class in all treatment plots was the 125–250 μm class and, generally, the percentage of eroded particle sizes did not increase with slope and rainfall intensity. Higher MWD of the eroded sediment was related to a higher percentage of bare soil exposed and gravel content associated with high soil burn severity and soil disaggregation in the slow vegetation recovery plots. The enrichment of finer clay silt particle sizes increased with varying maximum 30-min rainfall intensity (I30) in the slow vegetation recovery plots, and reflected increased aggregate breakdown and transport selectivity, whereas no good relationship was found in the fast vegetation recovery and unburned plots with varying I30. A minimum I30 of <3.56 mm h–1 and a maximum of 10.9 mm h–1 were found to be the threshold rainfall intensity values necessary for aggregate breakdown and transport of finer particles by both rainsplash and rainflow in the slow vegetation recovery plots, whereas the response was weak in the fast vegetation recovery and unburned plots following varying I30 dominated only by rainsplash transport closer to the plot sediment collector. The results show that higher vegetation cover in the fast vegetation recovery and unburned plots reduces erosive rainfall energy by 5.6- and 17.7-fold respectively, and runoff energy by 6.3- and 21.3-fold respectively, limiting aggregate breakdown and transport selectivity of finer particles compared with the slow vegetation recovery plots.

Additional keywords: aggregate stability, runoff, soil erosion, soil texture, vegetation recovery.


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