Abstract

This study assesses sediment erosion rates in the Zhoukou River Basin in southern Taiwan over the past three decades, focusing on the impact of extreme rainfall events. While various established methods determine erosion rates over different temporal scales, we employ an independent approach for decadal-scale erosion rate calculation by utilizing open-source global and regional digital elevation models (DEMs) data for two distinct periods. We introduce a new method that applies Fourier analysis to vertically register the DEMs, significantly minimizing their vertical bias. Through spectral analysis, we identify long wavelength topography crucial for correcting vertical offsets. Erosion rates, computed through DEMs of Difference (DoD), exhibit a similar trend of significant reduction in sediment export rates from 1990–2010 to 2011–2020 due to decreased extreme rainfall events, aligning with erosion rate estimates derived from mean suspended load data at gauge stations. Over the entire period from 1990 to 2020, the calculated denudation rate was 14.19 mm/yr, whereas in the recent decade (2011–2020), it decreased to 10.46 mm/yr. Our study suggests that the improved DoD method can effectively estimate sediment transport rates by leveraging underutilized DEMs captured at distinct points in time, especially when the erosional signal dominates data noise.

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