Rocky Mountain Research Station Publications

RMRS Online Publication - Journal Articles, External Publications, and Special Reports
Infiltration, erosion, and vegetation recovery following road obliteration


Foltz, R. B.; Rhee, H.; Yanosek, K. A. 2007. Infiltration, erosion, and vegetation recovery following road obliteration. Transactions of ASABE. 50(6): 1937-1943.

Forest roads are obliterated to lower the risks of surface erosion and mass failures. One purpose of the road obliteration is to return the compacted forest roads to productive pre?road conditions, i.e., a forest floor with high infiltration capacity, low interrill erodibility, and high vegetation ground cover. It is important to know how these characteristics recover following road obliteration. Infiltration capacity, interrill erodibility, and vegetation ground cover are essential parameters for modeling erosion from obliterated roads for erosion prediction models such as the Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP). We chose three sites located on the Payette National Forest, Idaho. Rainfall simulations were conducted on 1 x 1 m plots with three replications in two consecutive years. Three 30 min storm events with an intensity of 89 mm h-1 were applied to each plot. Photos were taken to determine vegetation ground cover. Infiltration capacity and interrill erodibility in this study were determined as 9.0 mm h-1 for saturated hydraulic conductivity and 3.2 x 106 kg·s m-4 for interrill erodibility. This study postulated a history of saturated hydraulic conductivity on a forest road from prior to road building to years after obliteration. The low elevation (1400 m) site had vegetation ground cover of 27% after three years following road obliteration, while the other high elevation (1800 m and 2200 m) sites had 8% after four years. We conclude that four years was not sufficient time for obliterated roads to return to the pre-road (forest floor) conditions, especially for infiltration capacity.

Keywords: erosion, forest roads, infiltration, interrill erodibility, obliteration, rainfall simulation, saturated hydraulic conductivity, vegetation recovery, WEPP


About PDFs: For best results, do not open the PDF in your Web browser. Right-click on the PDF link to download the PDF file directly to your computer. Click here for more PDF help.


Download Article
http://www.fs.fed.us/rm/pubs_other/rmrs_2007_foltz_r001.pdf

PDF File Size: 165 K


Title: RMRS Other Publications: Infiltration, erosion, and vegetation recovery following road obliteration
Electronic Publish Date: March 5, 2009
Last Update:
March 5, 2009

RMRS Publications | Order a publication | Contact Us