Data di Pubblicazione:
2017
Abstract:
In a fluvial system, mountain basins control sediment export to the lowland rivers. Hence, the analysis of the erosion
processes and sediment delivery patterns that act in mountain basins is important. Several studies have investigated
the alterations triggered by recent climatic change on the hydrological regime, whilst only a few works have
explored the consequences on the sediment dynamics. Here we combined and analyzed the quasi-unique dataset
of climatic conditions, landscape response, and sediment export produced, since 1986 in the Rio Cordon basin (5
km2, Eastern Italian Alps) to examine the sediment delivery processes occurring in the last three decades. The
temperature, precipitation, and fluvial sediment fluxes in the basin were analyzed using continuous measurement
executed by a permanent monitoring station, while the landscape evolution was investigated by three sediment
source inventories established in 1994, 2006, and 2016. Thus, the analysis focused on the trends exhibited during
the periods 1986-1993, 1994-2006, and 2007-2015. In terms of climatic conditions, three distinct climate forcing
stages can be observed in the periods analyzed: a relatively stable phase (1986-1993), a period characterized by
temperature and rainfall fluctuations (1994-2006), and a more recent warmer and wetter phase (2007-2015). In
the 1986-1993 period, the fluvial sediment fluxes reflected the stable trend exhibited by the climatic conditions.
In the subsequent 1994-2006 period, the average temperature and precipitation were in line with that previously
observed, although with higher interannual variability. Notwithstanding the climate forcing and the occurrence of
high magnitude/low frequency floods that strongly influenced the source areas, between 1994 and 2006 the Rio
Cordon basin showed relatively limited erosion activity. Hence, the climatic conditions and the landscape response
can only partially explain the strong increase of sediment export recorded in the 1994-2006 period. In this sense, the
sediment availability resulting from armour layer and bedform removal appears crucial to describing the sediment
fluxes during this period, stressing the key role of the in-channel sediment supply. In the recent period 2007-2015 a
marked climate warming accompanied by increased precipitation was observed. This climate forcing did not affect
the landscape evolution, with sediment source extent remaining substantially in line between 2006 and 2016. The
absence of a significant landscape response and the restoration of the channel armour layer can describe the limited
sediment fluxes observed during the last decade. In particular, the increased temperature and precipitation were not
accompanied by an increase in flood occurrence and magnitude, stressing the evident absence of hillslope-channel
network coupling. This research was funded by the University of Padova Research Projects 'Sediment transfer
processes in an Alpine basin: sediment cascades from hillslopes to the channel network-BIRD167919'.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.02 Abstract in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
sediment transport; sediment sources; monitoring
Elenco autori:
Cavalli, Marco
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