Wildfires burn extensive forest areas around the world each year. In many locations, fire- prone forest catchments are utilised for the supply of potable water to small communities up …
It is clear that, in some climates, fires are a natural phenomenon, they have occurred for millennia and plants have revealed the capacity to cope with them (Pausas et al., 2008). It is …
Comprehensive assessment of ecological change after fires have burned forests and rangelands is important if we are to understand, predict and measure fire effects. We …
Soil burn severity has been widely used to describe the impacts of fire on soils and is increasingly being recognised as a decisive factor controlling post-fire erosion rates …
D Dunkerley - Hydrological Processes: An International Journal, 2008 - Wiley Online Library
Rainfall is routinely reported as falling in 'events' or 'storms' whose beginning and end are defined by rainless intervals of a nominated duration (minimum inter‐event time, MIT). Rain …
Post‐wildfire changes to hydrologic and geomorphic systems can lead to widespread sediment redistribution. Understanding how sediment moves through a watershed is crucial …
Water crises—defined as significant declines in water quality and quantity—top the global risks list compiled by the World Economic Forum (2015) that have the greatest potential …
Debris flows are a typical hazard on steep slopes after wildfire, but unlike debris flows that mobilize from landslides, most postwildfire debris flows are generated from water runoff. The …
We developed a new online interface for the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) model (WEPPcloud) with a framework that allows the incorporation and development of …