Fluvial adjustments to soil erosion and plant cover changes in the Central Spanish Pyrenees
Publication date
2006
Authors
Beguería, S.
López-Moreno, J.I.
Gómez-Villar, A.
Rubio, V.
Lana-Renault, N.
García-Ruiz, J.M.
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DOI
Document Type
Preprint
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Abstract
Until the middle of the 20th Century, Pyrenean rivers were characterized by
braided channels, unstable sedimentary structures and an almost complete lack of plant
cover in the alluvial plain, due to the high sediment yield in hillslopes and the
occurrence of frequent and intense flooding. This was probably related to strong
demographic pressures, including the cultivation of steep slopes, frequent fires,
deforestation and overgrazing. Depopulation and farmland abandonment resulted in
plant recolonization in formerly cultivated areas, causing a decrease in runoff and
sediment yield. As a consequence, most Pyrenean rivers tend to reduce the width of the
alluvial plain and to replace the braided pattern with an incised, somewhat meandering
pattern, involving the construction of new terrace levels and the stabilization of fluvial
bars.
Keywords
fluvial adjustments, sediment yield, fluvial incision, farmland, abandonment, Central Spanish Pyrenees