Carolina Boix-Fayos
Spanish National Research Council
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Featured researches published by Carolina Boix-Fayos.
Journal of Environmental Quality | 2008
J. Albaladejo; Lopez J; Carolina Boix-Fayos; Gonzalo G. Barberá; M. Martínez-Mena
Restoration of degraded lands could be a way to reverse soil degradation and desertification in semiarid areas and mitigate greenhouse gases (GHG). Our objective was to evaluate the long-term effects of a single addition of organic refuse on soil physical properties and measure its carbon sequestration potential. In 1988, a set of five plots (87 m(2) each) was established in an open desert-like scrubland (2-4% cover) in Murcia, Spain, to which urban solid refuse (USR) was added in a single treatment at different rates. Soil properties were monitored over a 5-yr period. Sixteen years after the addition, three of the plots were monitored again (P0: control, P1: 13 kg m(-2), P2: 26 kg m(-2) of USR added) to assess the lasting effect of the organic addition on the soil organic carbon (SOC) pools and on the physical characteristics of the soil. The SOC content was higher in P2 (16.4 g kg(-1)) and in P1 (11.8 g kg(-1)) than in P0 (7.9 g kg(-1)). Likewise, aerial biomass increased from 0.18 kg m(-2) in P0 up to 0.27 kg m(-2) in P1 and 0.46 kg m(-2) in P2. This represents a total C sequestration of 9.5 Mg ha(-1) in P2 and 3.4 Mg ha(-1) in P1, most of the sequestered C remaining in the recalcitrant soil pool. Additionally, higher saturated hydraulic conductivity, aggregate stability, and available water content values and lower bulk density values were measured in the restored plots. Clearly, a single addition of organic refuse to the degraded soils to increase the potential for C sequestration was effective.
Journal of Soil and Water Conservation | 2014
Demetrio Antonio Zema; Giuseppe Bombino; Carolina Boix-Fayos; Vincenzo Tamburino; Santo Marcello Zimbone; Diego Fortugno
The effectiveness of check dams on channel morphology of managed torrents is rarely assessed. Therefore, there is a need for studies that focus on the impacts of existing engineering check dams on the planoaltimetric characteristics of the torrent, particularly in Mediterranean areas, where the hydrological regime of ephemeral channels is dynamically unsteady. The quantitative evaluation of the effects of the check dams on channel morphology after many years (i.e., at least four or five decades) helps introduce innovations to the usual analysis of check dam efficacy which have often been limited to qualitative observations for only a few years after installation. As a contribution to make up these shortcomings, this paper investigates the geomorphologic asset of a torrent in southern Italy containing 10 check dams (installed in the 1950s to 1960s) and analyzes the dynamics of the scouring and sedimentation processes upstream and downstream of selected check dams after 8 rainfall events; moreover, the capability of the model by Castillo (2007) to predict scouring/sedimentation in proximity to these check dams is assessed. Sediment stored upstream of each check dam (where lower channel gradients and wider channel sections formed very long and wide sedimentary wedges) is more than one order of magnitude higher compared to scouring downstream. The morphological analysis revealed that the check dams installed in the headwater reach play a function of bed stabilization (due to the longitudinal slope reduction) and flood lamination (because of the wider channel section) rather than a role of sediment collectors as their sediment storage capacity has already been completed. Scouring/sedimentation dynamics depend mainly on the channel slope and width in proximity to the check dams rather than on structure height. Finally, Castillos model showed an acceptable performance in predicting scouring/sedimentation in the channel bed close to check dams after the monitored rainfall events, the model efficiency being satisfactory and the differences between the mean observed and simulated values low. This investigation improves the understanding about morphological effects of check dams in Mediterranean torrents based on field observations and quantitative analysis.
Earth Surface Processes and Landforms | 2017
Diego Fortugno; Carolina Boix-Fayos; Giuseppe Bombino; Pietro Denisi; J. Rubio; Vincenzo Tamburino; Demetrio Antonio Zema
In Mediterranean semi-arid conditions, the availability of studies monitoring channel adjustments as a response to reforestation and check dams over representative observation periods, could help develop new management strategies. This investigation is an integrated approach assessing the adjustments of channel morphology in a typical torrent of southern Italy after land-use changes and check dam construction across a period of about 60 years. A statistical analysis of historical rainfall records, an analysis of land-use changes in the catchment area and a geomorphological mapping of channel adjustments were carried out and combined with field surveys of bed surface grain-size over a 5-km reach including 14 check dams. The analysis of the historical rainfall records showed a slight decrease in the amount and erosivity of precipitation. Mapping of land-use changes highlighted a general increase of vegetal coverage on the slopes adjacent to the monitored reaches. Together with the check dam network installation, this increase could have induced a reduction in water and sediment supply. The different erosional and depositional forms and adjustments showed a general narrowing between consecutive check dams together with local modifications detected upstream (bed aggradation and cross-section expansion together with low-flow realignments) and downstream (local incision) of the installed check dams. Changes in the torrent bends were also detected as a response to erosional and depositional processes with different intensities. The study highlighted: the efficiency of check dams against the disrupting power of intense floods by stabilizing the active channel and the influence of reforestation in increasing hillslope protection from erosion and disconnectivity of water and sediment flows towards the active channel. Only slight management interventions (for instance, the conversion of the existing check dams into open structures) are suggested, in order to mobilize the residual sediment avoiding further generalized incision of the active channel and coast line erosion. Copyright
Bosque (valdivia) | 2018
Pedro Pérez-Cutillas; Maria Francesca Cataldo; Demetrio Antonio Zema; Joris de-Vente; Carolina Boix-Fayos
Important land cover changes were documented in several areas of the Mediterranean basin with associated hydrological effects. This paper aims at contributing to the characterization of land use changes and vegetation cover in a basin representative of the Mediterranean mountain range, and quantifying the impact of those changes on lateral and vertical flows (discharge and evapotranspiration, respectively). For this purpose, a series of precipitation data and some components of the hydrological cycle were analyzed: streamflow-runoff in two periods (1933-1948 and 1996-2012). In addition, a spatial analysis of land use changes was carried out; this information was used for the spatial analysis of the curve number and evapotranspiration. Main results indicated that precipitation had not changed significantly between both periods, while streamflow declined by a 43 %, together with the loss of 63 % of agricultural areas that were replaced by shrubland and forest. Evapotranspiration increased in 57 % of the drainage area, with an average increase of 20 mm year -1. In general, the partition of rainfall was readjusted due to the recovery and changes of the natural vegetation cover, facilitating a redistribution of water within the hydrological cycle. As a result, the observed increase of vertical fluxes and the decrease of horizontal ones could potentially affect the hydrological resources of the area.
SpringerBriefs in Environmental Science | 2017
Janet Hooke; Peter Sandercock; L.H. Cammeraat; J.P. Lesschen; Lorenzo Borselli; Dino Torri; A. Meerkerk; Bas van Wesemael; Miguel Marchamalo; Gonzalo G. Barberá; Carolina Boix-Fayos; V. Castillo; J. A. Navarro-Cano
The context of processes and characteristics of soil erosion and land degradation in Mediterranean lands is outlined. The concept of connectivity is explained. The remainder of the chapter demonstrates development of methods of mapping, analysis and modelling of connectivity to produce a spatial framework for development of strategies of use of vegetation to reduce soil erosion and land degradation. The approach is applied in a range of typical land use types and at a hierarchy of scale from land unit to catchment. Patterns of connectivity and factors influencing the location and intensity of processes are identified, including the influence of topography, structures such as agricultural terraces and check dams, and past land uses. Functioning of connectivity pathways in various rainstorms is assessed. Modes of terrace construction and extent of maintenance, as well as presence of tracks and steep gradients are found to be of importance. A method of connectivity modelling that incorporates effects of structure and vegetation was developed and has been widely applied subsequently.
Cuadernos de Investigacion Geografica | 2013
Elisabet Nadeu Puig-Pey; Kristof Van Oost; J. de Vente; Carolina Boix-Fayos
Results from various studies published during the last decades suggest that soil erosion could be playing an important role in the global carbon (C) cycle. One of the major uncertainties is related to the effect that lateral fluxes of sediment and C may have on soil C dynamics and on its distribution within the
Earth-Science Reviews | 2006
Carolina Boix-Fayos; M. Martínez-Mena; E. Arnau-Rosalén; A. Calvo-Cases; V. Castillo; J. Albaladejo
Geomorphology | 2007
Carolina Boix-Fayos; Gonzalo G. Barberá; Francisco López-Bermúdez; V. Castillo
Earth-Science Reviews | 2013
Joris de Vente; Jean Poesen; Gert Verstraeten; Gerard Govers; Matthias Vanmaercke; Anton Van Rompaey; Mahmood Arabkhedri; Carolina Boix-Fayos
Journal of Arid Environments | 2011
Yolanda Cantón; Albert Solé-Benet; J. de Vente; Carolina Boix-Fayos; A. Calvo-Cases; C. Asensio; Juan Puigdefábregas