Literature DB >> 30245565

Measuring ephemeral gully erosion rates and topographical thresholds in an urban watershed using unmanned aerial systems and structure from motion photogrammetric techniques.

Napoleon Gudino-Elizondo1, Trent Biggs2, Carlos Castillo3, Ronald Bingner4, Eddy Langendoen4, Kristine Taniguchi2, Thomas Kretzschmar1, Yongping Yuan5, Douglas Liden6.   

Abstract

Both rural and urban development can lead to accelerated gully erosion. Quantifying gully erosion is challenging in environments where gullies are rapidly repaired, and in urban areas where microtopographic complexity complicates the delineation of contributing areas. This study used unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and Structure-from-Motion (SfM) photogrammetric techniques to quantify gully erosion in the Los Laureles Canyon watershed, a rapidly urbanizing watershed in Tijuana, Mexico. Following a storm event, the gully network extent was mapped using an orthomosaic (0.038 m pixel size); the local slope and watershed area contributing to each gully head were mapped with a Digital Surface Model (0.3 m pixel size). Gullies formed almost exclusively on unpaved roads which had erodible soils and concentrated flow. Management practices (e.g. road maintenance that fill gullies after large storms) contributed to total sediment production at the watershed scale. Sediment production from gully erosion was higher and threshold values of slope and drainage area for gully incision were lower than ephemeral gullies reported for agricultural settings. This indicates high vulnerability of unpaved roads to gully erosion which is consistent with high soil erodibility and low critical shear stress measured in the laboratory with a mini jet-erosion-test device. Future studies that evaluate effects of different soil types on gully erosion rates for unpaved roads, as well as those that model effects of management practices such as road paving and their impact on runoff, soil erosion, and sediment loads are needed to advance sediment management and planning in urban watersheds.

Keywords:  Gully erosion; Structure-from-Motion; Topographic thresholds; Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAV); Urbanization; Watershed management

Year:  2018        PMID: 30245565      PMCID: PMC6145458          DOI: 10.1002/ldr.2976

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Land Degrad Dev        ISSN: 1085-3278            Impact factor:   4.977


  1 in total

1.  Channel initiation and the problem of landscape scale.

Authors:  D R Montgomery; W E Dietrich
Journal:  Science       Date:  1992-02-14       Impact factor: 47.728

  1 in total
  3 in total

1.  Stream flow composition and sediment yield comparison between partially urbanized and undisturbed coastal watersheds-case study: St. John, US Virgin Islands.

Authors:  Napoleon Gudino-Elizondo; Thomas Kretzschmar; Sarah C Gray
Journal:  Environ Monit Assess       Date:  2019-10-25       Impact factor: 2.513

2.  Estimating soil degradation in montane grasslands of North-eastern Italian Alps (Italy).

Authors:  Loris Torresani; Jianshuang Wu; Roberta Masin; Mauro Penasa; Paolo Tarolli
Journal:  Heliyon       Date:  2019-06-17

3.  Modelling Runoff and Sediment Loads in a Developing Coastal Watershed of the US-Mexico Border.

Authors:  Napoleon Gudino-Elizondo; Trent W Biggs; Ronald L Bingner; Eddy J Langendoen; Thomas Kretzschmar; Encarnación V Taguas; Kristine T Taniguchi-Quan; Douglas Liden; Yongping Yuan
Journal:  Water (Basel)       Date:  2019       Impact factor: 3.103

  3 in total

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