Woodland's role in natural flood management: Evidence from catchment studies in Britain and Ireland

被引:12
|
作者
Xiao, L. [1 ]
Robinson, M. [2 ]
O'Connor, M. [3 ]
机构
[1] Trinity Coll Dublin, Dept Civil Struct & Environm Engn, Dublin, Ireland
[2] UK Ctr Ecol & Hydrol, Wallingford, Oxon, England
[3] Natl Univ Ireland, Gull Engn, Galway, Ireland
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
Forest harvesting; Streamflow; Natural flood management; Before-after-control-impact; Evidence-based forest impact; VEGETATION CHANGES; WESTERN CASCADES; GLOBAL EVIDENCE; FOREST; WATER; AFFORESTATION; HYDROLOGY; VARIABILITY; RESOURCES; PLYNLIMON;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.151877
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Despite the attention currently given to the potential environmental benefits of large-scale forest planting, there is a shortage of clear observational evidence regarding the effects on river flows, and what there is has often been contradictory or inconclusive. This paper presents three independently conducted paired-catchment forestry studies covering 66 station-years of flow measurements in the UK and Ireland. In each case coniferous evergreen trees were removed from one catchment with minimal soil disturbance while the adjoining control catchment was left unchanged. Trees were removed from 20% -90% of the three experimental basins. Following woodland removal there was an increase in dry weather baseflow at all sites. Baseflows increased by about 8% after tree removal from a quarter of the Hore basin and by 41% for the near-total cut at Howan. But the changes were more complex for peak flows. Tree harvesting increased the smallest and most frequent peak storm flows, indicating that afforestation would lead to the suppression of such events. This was however restricted to events well below the mean annual flood, indicating that the impact of forests upon the largest and most damaging floods is likely to be limited. Whilst a forest cover can be effective in mitigating small and frequent stormflows it should never be assumed to provide protection against major flood events.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A restatement of the natural science evidence concerning catchment-based 'natural' flood management in the UK
    Dadson, Simon J.
    Hall, Jim W.
    Murgatroyd, Anna
    Acreman, Mike
    Bates, Paul
    Beven, Keith
    Heathwaite, Louise
    Holden, Joseph
    Holman, Ian P.
    Lane, Stuart N.
    O'Connell, Enda
    Penning-Rowsell, Edmund
    Reynard, Nick
    Sear, David
    Thorne, Colin
    Wilby, Rob
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY A-MATHEMATICAL PHYSICAL AND ENGINEERING SCIENCES, 2017, 473 (2199):
  • [2] LAND SNAILS FROM BRITAIN'S MOST NORTHERLY NATURAL WOODLAND
    Preece, R. C.
    JOURNAL OF CONCHOLOGY, 2009, 40 : 105 - 106
  • [3] Groundwater flood risk mapping and management: examples from a lowland karst catchment in Ireland
    Naughton, O.
    Johnston, P. M.
    McCormack, T.
    Gill, L. W.
    JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT, 2017, 10 (01): : 53 - 64
  • [4] Towards Catchment Scale Natural Flood Management: Developing evidence, funding and governance approaches
    Carter, Jeremy Graham
    Karvonen, Andrew
    Winter, Amanda
    ENVIRONMENTAL POLICY AND GOVERNANCE, 2024,
  • [5] Natural flood management, lag time and catchment scale: Results from an empirical nested catchment study
    Black, Andrew
    Peskett, Leo
    MacDonald, Alan
    Young, Andy
    Spray, Chris
    Ball, Tom
    Thomas, Huw
    Werritty, Alan
    JOURNAL OF FLOOD RISK MANAGEMENT, 2021, 14 (03):
  • [6] A catchment partnership approach to delivering natural flood management in the Evenlode, UK
    Old, Joanne
    McKnight, David
    Bennett, Richard
    Grzybek, Roland
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF CIVIL ENGINEERS-ENGINEERING SUSTAINABILITY, 2019, 172 (07) : 327 - 334
  • [7] Assessment of Natural Flood Management Potential in the Limb Brook Catchment, Sheffield
    Spence, Kevin
    Rotherham, Ian
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 39TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, 2022, : 2640 - 2646
  • [8] In-Channel Natural Flood Management Approach to Flood Risk Management: Modelling Applications on a Small Catchment in the UK
    Valentine, Muhawenimana
    Rhys, Tucker
    Samuel, Rowley J.
    Elizabeth, Follett
    Shunqi, Pan
    Catherine, Wilson A. M. E.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 39TH IAHR WORLD CONGRESS, 2022, : 6363 - 6369
  • [9] Natural Flood Management: Beyond the evidence debate
    Wingfield, Thea
    Macdonald, Neil
    Peters, Kimberley
    Spees, Jack
    Potter, Karen
    AREA, 2019, 51 (04) : 743 - 751
  • [10] Defining a Regional Neolithic: The Evidence from Britain and Ireland
    Bogucki, Peter
    JOURNAL OF ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH, 2010, 66 (04) : 542 - 544