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Experimental investigation of the effects of shrub filter strips on debris flow trapping and interception
Institution:1. Key Laboratory of Mountain Hazards and Earth Surface Processes, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610041, China;2. Institute of Mountain Hazards and Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chengdu 610041, China;3. University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China;4. Pipe China Southwest Pipeline Company, Chengdu 610095, China;5. Key Laboratory for Forest Ecosystem Process and Management, College of Forestry, Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University, Fuzhou, 350002, China;6. Department of GIS-RS and Watershed Management, Maybod Branch, Islamic Azad University, Maybod, Yazd, Iran
Abstract:Ecological engineering plays an increasingly significant role in mountain hazard control, but the effect of species selection and arrangement (e.g., row spacing and stem spacing) on debris flow suppression is still unclear. To further understand the interception efficiency of shrub arrangement parameters on debris flow and explore the difference with slow hydraulic erosion, sixteen sets of small-scale flume experiments with different stem and row spacings were done to study the effects of shrubs on debris flow severity, flow rate, velocity, and particle size. The results suggest that, for a dilute debris flow, sediment interception effectiveness (27.4%–60.9%) decreases gradually as stem spacing increases. Moreover, as row spacing increases, flow velocity reduction (34.4%–44.9%) and flow reduction (18.5%–47.4%) gradually decrease; and the bulk density reduction (0.5%–5.3%) and sediment interception increase initially and then decrease. In contrast, for a viscous debris flow, the flow reduction, flow velocity reduction, and sedimentation interception decrease gradually as the stem spacing increases. As row spacing increases, the flow velocity reduction, flow reduction, and sediment interception all increase initially and then decrease. A formula for the flow velocity of dilute debris flow after the filter strip was derived based on the energy conservation law and Bernoulli's equation, confirming that debris flow movement is closely related to the degree of vegetation cover. This research strengthens the current understanding of the effectiveness of vegetation in debris flow disaster prevention and control and can guide practical applications.
Keywords:Ecological engineering  Mountain hazards mitigation and prevention  Shrub filter strips  Debris flow  Sediment trapping
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