International Soil and Water Conservation Research (Jun 2023)

Hydrological and sediment connectivity under freeze–thaw meltwater compound erosion conditions on a loessal slope

  • Tian Wang,
  • Jingsi Li,
  • Jingming Hou,
  • Yongyong Ma,
  • Peng Li,
  • Yu Tong,
  • Jing Li,
  • Zhanbin Li

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
pp. 402 – 411

Abstract

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Freeze-thaw processes can influence hydrology, soil erosion, and morphological development by altering the connectivity between active pathways of water and sediment transport. Concentrated flow experiments were conducted involving frozen, shallow thawed, and unfrozen soil slopes under 1, 2, and 4 L/min runoff rates at a temperature of approximately 5 °C. In this study, hydrological connectivity was analysed via the simplified hydrological curve and relative surface connection function. Sediment connectivity was analysed via the sediment structure connectivity and sediment functional connectivity. Results indicated that hydrological connectivity was greatest on frozen slopes (FS), followed by shallow thawed slopes (STS), and unfrozen slopes (UFS) given a constant flow rate. Hydrological connectivity increased with increasing runoff rate for each freeze-thaw condition. Freezing condition and runoff rate exhibited a positive response to the hydrological connectivity. Sediment structure connectivity increased with increasing runoff rate for each slope condition. The ordering of sediment structure connectivity across freeze-thaw condition was that FS was greater than STS while STS was greater than UFS independent of flow rate. Sediment functional connectivity included longitudinal, lateral, and vertical connectivity components. Sediment longitudinal and vertical connectivity indicated a trend of first increasing and then decreasing under the different runoff rates and freeze–thaw conditions. For a given runoff rate, the ordering of sediment longitudinal and vertical connectivity across freeze-thaw condition was that FS was greater than STS while STS was greater than UFS. Sediment lateral connectivity exhibited a trend of first decreasing and then stabilizing. The ordering of sediment lateral connectivity across freeze-thaw condition was that UFS was greater than STS while STS was greater than FS. FS could more easily reach longitudinal and vertical penetration. Sediment longitudinal and vertical connectivity rates demonstrated increasing trends with increasing runoff rate after runoff generation stabilization and gradually approached unity. This research further improves our understanding of the hydrological and erosional mechanisms of meltwater and the generation of flooding in frozen soil conditions.

Keywords