Title of article :
Runoff and sediment yield from rural roads, trails and settlements in the upper Konto catchment, East Java, Indonesia
Author/Authors :
Rijsdijk، نويسنده , , Anton and Sampurno Bruijnzeel، نويسنده , , L.A. and Sutoto، نويسنده , , C. Kukuh، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
10
From page :
28
To page :
37
Abstract :
The potential importance of roads and settlements for the generation of storm runoff and sediment in tropical steeplands is increasingly recognised but rarely quantified. This paper presents runoff and sediment yield data for a cobbled and an unpaved road section, two large unbounded settlement plots, and several trails draining residential areas or terraced fields in a volcanic upland catchment in East Java. In addition, the sediment yield of major landslides associated with roads was quantified. The unpaved road section exhibited an average runoff coefficient of about 65% and yielded about 7 kg m− 2 yr− 1 of sediment. Both the runoff coefficient and the sediment yield for the cobbled road section (plus adjacent yards) were lower (38% and 1.9 kg m− 2 yr− 1). Sediment output from a 4160-m2 hillside plot including a network of trails draining terraced fields (for which runoff and sediment outputs were shown to be negligible) was similar to that for the cobbled road (2–3 kg m− 2 yr− 1 depending on rainfall). However, a much higher value was obtained when the overall soil loss from the plot was expressed per square metre of trail surface area (ca. 42 kg m− 2 yr− 1) whereas the associated trail runoff coefficient was about 70%. The results obtained for several trails and large unbounded plots draining residential areas at two locations were less extreme (runoff coefficients of 24–43%; soil loss 1.3–3.5 kg m− 2 yr− 1). Landsliding occurred mainly at the end of the rainy season (March) and was estimated to have contributed ca. 2365 m3 of sediment to the main road network during the 1988/89 wet season vs. ca. 905 m3 in 1989/90 and only ca. 150 m3 in 2000/01. It is concluded that, despite their relatively small areal extent (5% in the study area), rural roads, trails and settlements are significant producers of runoff and sediment at the catchment scale and should be included in watershed management programmes designed to reduce catchment sediment yields and reservoir siltation.
Keywords :
Runoff generation , Soil erosion , Mass Wasting , Roads , Watershed management , settlements
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Geomorphology
Record number :
2359434
Link To Document :
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