Abstract

ABSTRACT Rainfall associated with Hurricane María triggered more than 70,000 shallow landslides over a 6,400 km2 area of Puerto Rico for a mean density of 11.2 slope failures per km2. When compared to other single storm landslide inventories with similarly sized search areas in tropical and sub-tropical regions, HMA’s mean landslide density is eleven times greater than the average. This study relied on frequency and zero-inflated negative binomial regression analyses to explain the spatial variability of landslide densities induced by HMA in relation to soil, geologic terrane, land cover, total storm precipitation, slope, and elevation. Results show that landslide densities tended to be exponentially higher for those areas with the highest rainfall totals and greater on igneous intrusive and other non-limestone sedimentary geologic terranes. Additionally, maximum densities occurred on relatively moderate slopes of 35–50% and not on the steepest hillslopes. Although a resulting regression model over-predicts landslides at lower elevations and underestimates high landslide density areas, it provides an acceptable fit for the landslide densities at a 0.25 km2 scale. The results presented here can guide future landslide susceptibility analyses to adequately contextualize the heterogeneity of landslide activity caused by extreme tropical cyclones in Puerto Rico and elsewhere.

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