Abstract

AbstractPostfire debris flows are particularly complex to study because they do not form discrete initiation locations and commonly involve multiple simultaneously operating erosional processes. Although recent work has begun to elucidate a more mechanistic understanding of postfire debris flows, there is still a paucity of detailed sediment budgets characterizing these events. In this study, we seek to understand how postfire sediment sources and erosional processes change over multiple storm cycles. To do this, we performed repeat high‐resolution change detection in a headwater catchment burned by the 2018 Holy Fire in the Santa Ana Mountains, California, USA. This included terrestrial laser scanning in a zero‐order catchment (0.95 ha) and unmanned aerial vehicle structure from motion of a headwater channel network (up to 6.5 ha). During the initial storm events that produced runoff‐generated debris flows, we found that the evacuation of dry ravel and prefire colluvium accounted for half of the eroded material. These initial flows also acted to clear out much of the material stored within downstream headwater channel networks. In subsequent storm events of equal or greater rainfall intensity, total erosion from the study site was subdued, and the relative importance of shallow hillslope erosion from interrill and rill erosion was increased, as has been noted in similar studies in the region. Overall, this suggests that channel sediment supplies may be more rapidly depleted than hillslope sources, which may drive a trend of decreasing sediment fluxes over time from burned headwater catchments subject to repeated runoff events.

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