Title
Identifying controls of the rainfall-runoff response of small catchments in the tropical Andes (Ecuador)
Date Issued
15 September 2011
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Crespo P.
Feyen J.
Bücker A.
Breuer L.
Frede H.
Ramírez M.
Imperial College London
Abstract
Tropical mountain regions are characterized by strong spatial climate gradients which together with the limited amount of data and knowledge of the underlying processes hinder the management of the water resources. Especially for regional-scale prediction it is important to identify the dominant factors controlling the rainfall-runoff response and link those to known spatial patterns of climate, soils, and vegetation. This study analyzes the rainfall-runoff relation of 13 intensively monitored micro-catchments in the Andes of southern Ecuador. The results of this study show that streamflow in the southern cordillera of the Ecuadorian Andes, above 2500. m a.s.l., primarily consists of subsurface flow. The yearly amount of streamflow is controlled by the annual rainfall depth, whereas the temporal distribution is mainly governed by the lateral saturated hydraulic conductivity, the soil water retention and the antecedent soil moisture content. Anthropogenic effects were found insignificant, with the exception in one of the studied micro-catchment. Effect of land use changes in most of the micro-catchments did not reflect in the shape of the flow duration curve because either the spatial extent of human impact was small and/or the overall basin slope was less than 20%. © 2011 Elsevier B.V.
Start page
164
End page
174
Volume
407
Issue
April 1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos Ciencias del medio ambiente
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-80052029034
Source
Journal of Hydrology
ISSN of the container
00221694
Sponsor(s)
The research was feasible thanks to a grant from the following donors: the European Commission 6th Framework RTD Program – INCO (EPIC FORCE: Evidence-based policy for integrated control of forested river catchments in extreme rainfall and snowmelt), PROTOS (a Belgian NGO), DIUC (the Research Office of the University of Cuenca), IAMGOLD S.A. (Quimsacocha Project) and DFG (German Research Foundation, Research Unit 816: Biodiversity and Sustainable Management of a Megadiverse Mountain Ecosystem in South Ecuador, subproject B3.2, BR223814-1). In addition, the first author, Patricio Crespo, was supported by a DFG grant and the SENACYT PIC-08-460 project. Without the financial assistance it would not have been possible to gather the large number of data and shed light on the factors controlling the rainfall–runoff process at micro-catchment scale under montane rainforest, páramo and pasture. The authors like to acknowledge PROMAS, the director Dr. Felipe Cisneros for his support and the technical staff for their assistance in the data collection. Special thanks are due to the personnel of the San Francisco Research Station (DFG, Germany) for the assistance in the measuring campaigns and pre-processing of data. Many thanks are due to Pablo Borja for his assistance with the statistical analysis and Vladimiro Tobar for the interpretation of the PCA results. Last but not least the authors like to acknowledge the very valuable and critical remarks made by the editor and reviewers. Their comments and suggestions resulted in a considerable improvement of the quality of the manuscript.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus