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Enhanced sediment delivery in a changing climate in semi-arid mountain basins: Implications for water resource management and aquatic habitat in the northern Rocky Mountains

Authors :
Goode, Jaime R.
Luce, Charles H.
Buffington, John M.
Source :
Geomorphology. Feb2012, Vol. 139-140, p1-15. 15p.
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Abstract: The delivery and transport of sediment through mountain rivers affects aquatic habitat and water resource infrastructure. While climate change is widely expected to produce significant changes in hydrology and stream temperature, the effects of climate change on sediment yield have received less attention. In the northern Rocky Mountains, we expect climate change to increase sediment yield primarily through changes in temperature and hydrology that promote vegetation disturbances (i.e., wildfire, insect/pathogen outbreak, drought-related die off). Here, we synthesize existing data from central Idaho to explore (1) how sediment yields are likely to respond to climate change in semi-arid basins influenced by wildfire, (2) the potential consequences for aquatic habitat and water resource infrastructure, and (3) prospects for mitigating sediment yields in forest basins. Recent climate-driven increases in the severity and extent of wildfire suggest that basin-scale sediment yields within the next few years to decades could be greater than the long-term average rate of 146Tkm−2 year−1 observed for central Idaho. These elevated sediment yields will likely impact downstream reservoirs, which were designed under conditions of historically lower sediment yield. Episodic erosional events (massive debris flows) that dominate post-fire sediment yields are impractical to mitigate, leaving road restoration as the most viable management opportunity for offsetting climate-related increases in sediment yield. However, short-term sediment yields from experimental basins with roads are three orders of magnitude smaller than those from individual fire-related events (on the order of 101 Tkm−2 year−1 compared to 104 Tkm−2 year−1, respectively, for similar contributing areas), suggesting that road restoration would provide a relatively minor reduction in sediment loads at the basin-scale. Nevertheless, the ecologically damaging effects of fine sediment (material<6mm) chronically produced from roads will require continued management efforts. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0169555X
Volume :
139-140
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Geomorphology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
71248262
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geomorph.2011.06.021