Redirigiendo al acceso original de articulo en 23 segundos...
Inicio  /  Water  /  Vol: 12 Par: 6 (2020)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Modelling the Effects of Changes in Forest Cover and Climate on Hydrology of Headwater Catchments in South-Central Chile

Guillermo Barrientos    
Albert Herrero    
Andrés Iroumé    
Oscar Mardones and Ramon J. Batalla    

Resumen

This study analyses the changes in the runoff of forested experimental catchments in south-central Chile, to determine to what extent observed trends can be attributed to effects of intensive forestry and/or climate change. For this, we applied the distributed TETIS® model to eight catchments (7.1-413.6 ha) representative of the land uses and forestry activities in this geographical area. Rainfall and runoff data collected between 2008 and 2015 were used for modelling calibration and validation. Simulation of three land uses (current cover, partial harvest and native forest) and 25 combinations of climatic scenarios (percentage increases or decreases of up to 20% of rainfall and evapotranspiration relative to the no-change scenario applied to input series) were used in each calibration. We found that changes in land use and climate had contrasting effects on runoff. Smaller catchments affected by the driest climatic scenarios experienced higher runoff when the forest cover was lower than under full forest cover (plantations or native forests). In contrast, larger catchments under all climatic scenarios yielded higher runoff below the full forest cover than under partial harvest and native forest. This suggests that runoff can be influenced, to a great extent, by rainfall decrease and evapotranspiration increase, with the model predicting up to a 60% decrease in runoff yield for the dry?s climatic scenario. This study proves to be relevant to inform ongoing discussions related to forest management in Chile, and is intended to minimize the impact of forest cover on runoff yield under uncertain climatic scenarios.

 Artículos similares

       
 
Rui Wang and Yijing Li    
Given the paramount impacts of COVID-19 on people?s lives in the capital of the UK, London, it was foreseeable that the city?s crime patterns would have undergone significant transformations, especially during lockdown periods. This study aims to testify... ver más

 
Vincent Obry-Legros, Geneviève Boisjoly     Pág. 67 - 96
While the influence of land use and transport networks on travel behavior is known, few studies have jointly examined the effects of home and work location characteristics when modelling travel behavior. In this study, a two-step approach is proposed to ... ver más

 
Lei Jiang and Ziyue Zeng    
Since the impoundment of the Three Gorges Project, the downstream hydrology and river dynamics have been modified. The Yichang?Chenglingji Reach (YCR), as a part of the mainstream of the Middle Yangtze River, has consequently been significantly scoured, ... ver más
Revista: Water

 
Jure Sr?e, Marko Perkovic and Aleksander Grm    
The environmental effects of ship propellers were not even close to fully examined before the current massive ships were introduced to sea trade. Larger ships, result in greater length, beam, draft and propulsion power. Of concern here is the under-keel ... ver más

 
Yuxiang Zhang, Reamonn MacReamoinn, Philip Cardiff and Jennifer Keenahan    
Aerodynamic performance is of critical importance to the design of long-span bridges. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) modelling offers bridge designers an opportunity to investigate aerodynamic performance for long-span bridges during the design phase... ver más
Revista: Infrastructures