학술논문

Time since burning and rainfall characteristics impact post-fire debris-flow initiation and magnitude
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Environmental & Engineering Geoscience. 27(1):43-56
Subject
22|Environmental geology
California
damage
debris flows
drainage basins
erodibility
erosion rates
fires
Fish fire 2016
geologic hazards
hydrology
infiltration
Las Lomas Basin
mass movements
natural hazards
numerical models
rainfall
rates
runoff
San Gabriel Mountains
sediment transport
simulation
soils
statistical analysis
time series analysis
topsoil
transport
United States
vegetation
weathered materials
Language
English
ISSN
1078-7275
Abstract
The extreme heat from wildfire alters soil properties and incinerates vegetation, leading to changes in infiltration capacity, ground cover, soil erodibility, and rainfall interception. These changes promote elevated rates of runoff and sediment transport that increase the likelihood of runoff-generated debris flows. Debris flows are most common in the year immediately following wildfire, but temporal changes in the likelihood and magnitude of debris flows following wildfire are not well constrained. In this study, we combine measurements of soil-hydraulic properties with vegetation survey data and numerical modeling to understand how debris-flow threats are likely to change in steep, burned watersheds during the first 3 years of recovery. We focus on documenting recovery following the 2016 Fish Fire in the San Gabriel Mountains, California, and demonstrate how a numerical model can be used to predict temporal changes in debris-flow properties and initiation thresholds. Numerical modeling suggests that the 15-minute intensity-duration (ID) threshold for debris flows in post-fire year 1 can vary from 15 to 30 mm/hr, depending on how rainfall is temporally distributed within a storm. Simulations further demonstrate that expected debris-flow volumes would be reduced by more than a factor of three following 1 year of recovery and that the 15-minute rainfall ID threshold would increase from 15 to 30 mm/hr to greater than 60 mm/hr by post-fire year 3. These results provide constraints on debris-flow thresholds within the San Gabriel Mountains and highlight the importance of considering local rainfall characteristics when using numerical models to assess debris-flow and flood potential.