Abstract

Abstract. A long-term measurement programme was operated in southern Italy during the 1960s and 1970s, to provide information on the suspended sediment yields from the main river basins. Information obtained for the rivers of Calabria suggests that suspended sediment yields in this area are relatively low. However, there is evidence that the intensity of land degradation within the upstream catchments is substantially higher than suggested by the values of specific sediment yield and there is a need to explore the relationship between on-site soil loss and downstream sediment yield more closely. Monitoring time-integrated erosion rates over large areas has traditionally required extensive long-term measurement programmes employing experimental plots. The fallout radionuclide caesium-137 (137Cs) offers an alternative means of documenting medium-term rates of soil loss. This paper describes the use of 137Cs measurements and the available sediment load data to explore the links between soil erosion, sediment redistribution and storage, and sediment output for a medium-scale (41.3 km2) catchment in Calabria. Data available from a sediment load monitoring programme undertaken at the catchment outlet during 1962–1977 have been used to estimate the longer-term catchment sediment yield. This estimate has been combined with information provided by the 137Cs measurements, to establish a medium-term sediment budget for the catchment. The results provided by the 137Cs measurements indicate that the catchment is subject to much higher rates of soil loss and land degradation than suggested by its specific sediment yield. These findings are consistent with the results obtained for other catchments in Calabria for which both 137Cs derived erosion rates and measured sediment yields are available.

Highlights

  • In semi-arid Mediterranean areas, the construction of small dams aimed at providing water for domestic supply, livestock, or irrigation has generated a need for information on sediment yields for the main river basins

  • This paper reports the results of a study where 137Cs measurements were employed within a medium-scale (41.3 km2) catchment in southern Italy, with the aim of assembling information on soil erosion and redistribution on the catchment slopes

  • If the information provided by the 100 sampling points within the Melito catchment can be assumed to provide a representative sample of the magnitude of soil redistribution rates on the slopes of the catchment, these data can provide a basis for establishing a sediment budget for the catchment slopes

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Summary

Introduction

In semi-arid Mediterranean areas, the construction of small dams aimed at providing water for domestic supply, livestock, or irrigation has generated a need for information on sediment yields for the main river basins. Recent studies in this region have demonstrated that the low values of specific sediment yield derived from this monitoring programme obscure the existence of appreciable erosion rates in many areas of the catchments involved (Porto et al, 2009b). Data available from suspended sediment monitoring undertaken at the catchment outlet during the 1960s and 1970s have been used to estimate the contemporary sediment yield. This estimate has been combined with the information provided by the 137Cs measurements to establish a sediment budget for the catchment. The results confirm that 137Cs measurements are valuable for quantifying both erosion and sediment redistribution within a catchment and for establishing its sediment budget

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