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Augmentation of Wrf-hydro To Simulate Overland-flow- and Streamflow-generated Debris Flow Susceptibility In Burn Scars

Abstract

In steep wildfire-burned terrains, intense rainfall can produce large runoff that can trigger highly destructive debris flows. However, the ability to accurately characterize and forecast debris flow susceptibility in burned terrains using physics-based tools remains limited. Here, we augment the Weather Research and Forecasting Hydrological modeling system (WRF-Hydro) to simulate both overland and channelized flows and assess postfire debris flow susceptibility over a regional domain. We perform hindcast simulations using high-resolution weather-radar-derived precipitation and reanalysis data to drive non-burned baseline and burn scar sensitivity experiments. Our simulations focus on January 2021 when an atmospheric river triggered numerous debris flows within a wildfire burn scar in Big Sur – one of which destroyed California's famous Highway 1. Compared to the baseline, our burn scar simulation yields dramatic increases in total and peak discharge and shorter lags between rainfall onset and peak discharge, consistent with streamflow observations at nearby US Geological Survey (USGS) streamflow gage sites. For the 404 catchments located in the simulated burn scar area, median catchment-area-normalized peak discharge increases by ∼ 450 % compared to the baseline. Catchments with anomalously high catchment-area-normalized peak discharge correspond well with post-event field-based and remotely sensed debris flow observations. We suggest that our regional postfire debris flow susceptibility analysis demonstrates WRF-Hydro as a compelling new physics-based tool whose utility could be further extended via coupling to sediment erosion and transport models and/or ensemble-based operational weather forecasts. Given the high-fidelity performance of our augmented version of WRF-Hydro, as well as its potential usage in probabilistic hazard forecasts, we argue for its continued development and application in postfire hydrologic and natural hazard assessments.

Article / Publication Data
Active/Online
YES
Available Metadata
DOI ↗
Fiscal Year
Peer Reviewed
YES
Publication Name
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Published On
July 27, 2022
Publisher Name
European Geosciences Union
Print Volume
22
Issue
7
Submitted On
November 16, 2021
URL ↗

Institutions

Not available

Authors

Authors who have authored or contributed to this publication.

  • Chuxuan Li - lead None
    Other
  • Wei Yu - fourth Gsl
    Under Contract to NOAA/Global Systems Laboratory
    325 Broadway, Boulder, Colorado