Abstract

Understanding how the environmental factors that determine erosion operate is essential to know the past and future evolution of the Earth and adequately manage natural resources. In this work, the main controlling factors of the current sediment export in the western side of the extratropical Andes (20°-55°S) are investigated using multidecadal series of specific suspended sediment yields from 42 rivers, as well as land cover, climatic, cryospheric, topographic, seismological and geological data. Through an automatic selection of Generalized Additive Models based on predictability and complexity, it was found that the combined effects of extreme runoff, glacier cover and channel steepness explain ~90 % of the spatial variability of sediment export. The runoff effect varies from positive for hyper-arid and semi-arid settings to slightly negative for moderate and wet settings, probably because of an associated increase in vegetation coupled with a recurrence and magnitude of floods that becomes greater than the time it takes for the basins to generate sediment. Cryosphere and channel steepness influences were also observed on the average suspended sediment concentration, which is less associated with water availability and more associated with erodibility and sediment availability.

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