Impact of gully incision on hillslope hydrology
Abstract
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd The Southern U.S. Piedmont ranging from Virginia to
Georgia underwent severe gully erosion over a century of farming mainly for cotton
(1800s–1930s). Although tree succession blanketed much of this region by the middle
20th century, gully erosion still occurs, especially during wet seasons. While many
studies on gully erosion have focused on soil loss, soil carbon exchange, and stormwater
response, the impacts on soil moisture, groundwater, and transpiration remain under-studied.
Using a newly developed 2D hydrologic model, this study analyzes the impacts of gully
erosion on hillslope hydrologic states and fluxes. Results indicate that increases
in gully incision lead to reduction in groundwater table, root zone soil moisture,
and transpiration. These reductions show seasonal variations, but the season when
the reduction is maximum differs among the hydrologic variables. Spatially, the impacts
are generally the greatest near the toe of the hillslope and reduce further away from
it, although the reductions are sometimes non-monotonic. Overall, the impacts are
larger for shallow gully depths and diminish as the incision goes deeper. Lastly,
the extent of impacts on a heterogeneous hillslope is found to be very different with
respect to a homogeneous surrogate made of dominant soil properties. These results
show that through gully erosion, the landscape not only loses soil but also a large
amount of water from the subsurface. The magnitude of water loss is, however, dependent
on hydrogeologic and topographic configuration of the hillslope. The results will
facilitate (a) mapping of relative susceptibility of landscapes to gullying, (b) understanding
of the impacts of stream manipulations such as due to dredging on hillslope eco-hydrology,
(c) prioritization of mitigation measures to prevent gullying, and (d) design of observation
campaigns to assess the impacts of gullying on hydrologic response.
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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21219Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1002/hyp.13845Publication Info
Chen, X; Kumar, M; deB Richter, D; & Mau, Y (2020). Impact of gully incision on hillslope hydrology. Hydrological Processes. 10.1002/hyp.13845. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/21219.This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this
article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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