Abstract

Soil moisture conditions play a key role in runoff and sediment load dynamics in river catchments of contrasting ecosystems. However, the highly marked seasonality of Mediterranean climate affects hydrological processes and sediment transport strongly, as evapotranspiration determines a succession of wet, transition and dry periods throughout a hydrological year. This study examines results of soil moisture, water and sediment fluxes during five hydrological years in a representative small mid-mountain Mediterranean catchment. It aims to assess the sediment load contribution and its variability at different temporal scales. Precipitation, runoff and suspended sediment load were calculated at annual, seasonal and event scales to assess inter- and intra-annual variability. A database with 45 events was used to identify the main controlling factors over sediment load thought bivariate relationships and an analysis of soil moisture-discharge and discharge-suspended sediment concentration hysteresis. At the annual scale, lithology, land use and soil conservation structures characteristic of the catchment caused low values of sediment yield, although inter-annual rates varied by up to three orders of magnitude (0.08 to 11.86 t km−2 y−1). Seasonal analysis of accumulated sediment load showed that 80% was generated during the autumn and winter seasons. At the event scale, streamflow and soil moisture were the controlling factors for the largest sediment load contributions. The highest frequency of clockwise discharge-suspended sediment concentration hysteresis revealed that most of the sediment was generated from nearby sources, although the largest sediment loads were contributed under wet antecedent conditions, as depicted by the soil moisture-discharge hysteresis assessment.

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