Elephant Trail Runoff and Sediment Dynamics in Northern Thailand

被引:7
作者
Sidle, Roy C. [1 ]
Ziegler, Alan D. [2 ]
机构
[1] Appalachian State Univ, Dep Geol, Environm Sci Program, Boone, NC 28608 USA
[2] Natl Univ Singapore, Dep Geog, Singapore 117570, Singapore
关键词
NATIONAL-PARK; ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY; EROSION PROCESSES; WOODY VEGETATION; SOIL-EROSION; ROAD RUNOFF; LAND-USE; FOREST; IMPACTS; CONSERVATION;
D O I
10.2134/jeq2009.0218
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Although elephants may exert various impacts on the environment, no data are available on the effects of elephant nails on runoff, soil erosion, and sediment transport to streams during storms We monitored water and sediment fluxes from an elephant trail in northern Thailand during seven monsoon storms representing a wide range of rainfall energies Runoff:varied from trivial amounts to 353 mm and increased rapidly in tandem with expanding contributing areas once a threshold of wetting occurred Runoff coefficients during the two largest storms were much higher than could be generated from the trail itself. implying a 4 5- to 7 9-fold Increase in the drainage areas contributing to storm runoff Clockwise hysteresis patterns of suspended sediment observed during most storms was amplified by a "first flush" of sediment early on the hydrograph in which easily entrained sediment was transported As runoff areas expanded during the latter part of large storms, discharge increased but sediment concentrations declined Thus, sediment flux was better correlated to kinetic energy of rainfall on the falling limbs of most storm hydrographs compared to rising limbs Based on a power function relationship between sediment flux and storm kinetic energy, the estimated annual sediment yield from the trail for 135 storms in 2005 was 308 to 375 Mg ha(-1) yr(-1), higher than from most disturbed land surfaces in the tropics The eight hugest storms (30% of total storm energy) in 2005 transported half of the total annual sediment These measurements together with site investigations reveal that highly interconnected elephant trails, together with other source areas, directly link runoff and sediment to streams
引用
收藏
页码:871 / 881
页数:11
相关论文
共 53 条
[1]   INDICATORS OF SOIL MOVEMENT ON RANGE WATERSHEDS [J].
ANDERSON, EW .
JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT, 1974, 27 (03) :244-247
[2]  
ANDERSON GD, 1974, RHODESIA J SO AFRICA, V4, P1
[3]  
Baharuddin K., 1995, Journal of Tropical Forest Science, V7, P558
[4]   Fruit, minerals, and forest elephant trails: Do all roads lead to Rome? [J].
Blake, S ;
Inkamba-Nkulu, C .
BIOTROPICA, 2004, 36 (03) :392-401
[5]  
Bons C. A., 1990, IAHS Publication, P279
[6]   Elephant- and human-induced changes to dung beetle (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) assemblages in the Maputaland Centre of Endemism [J].
Botes, A ;
McGeoch, MA ;
van Rensburg, BJ .
BIOLOGICAL CONSERVATION, 2006, 130 (04) :573-583
[7]   Ground cover impacts on sediment and phosphorus export from manured riparian pasture [J].
Butler, David M. ;
Franklin, Dorcas H. ;
Ranells, Noah N. ;
Poore, Matthew H. ;
Green, James T., Jr. .
JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 2006, 35 (06) :2178-2185
[8]   Tracking in game trails: Looking afresh at the politics of environmental history in South Africa [J].
Carruthers, Jane .
ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY, 2006, 11 (04) :804-829
[9]   Long-term erosion and surface roughness change of rain-forest terrain following selective logging, Danum Valley, Sabah, Malaysia [J].
Clarke, M. A. ;
Walsh, R. P. D. .
CATENA, 2006, 68 (2-3) :109-123
[10]   Soil recovery from track construction and harvesting changes in surface infiltration, erosion and delivery rates with time [J].
Croke, J ;
Hairsine, P ;
Fogarty, P .
FOREST ECOLOGY AND MANAGEMENT, 2001, 143 (1-3) :3-12