Person:
Giménez Díaz, Rafael

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Giménez Díaz

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Rafael

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Ingeniería

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IS-FOOD. Research Institute on Innovation & Sustainable Development in Food Chain

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0000-0003-3210-0578

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6698

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Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Factors controlling sediment export in a small agricultural watershed in Navarre (Spain)
    (Elsevier, 2012) Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Grande Esteban, Ildefonso; Díez Beregaña, Javier; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; Goñi Garatea, Mikel; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak; Gestión de Empresas; Enpresen Kudeaketa; Gobierno de Navarra / Nafarroako Gobernua
    It is recognised that the hydrological and erosion processes in watersheds are very much conditioned by the (inter)action of a number of variables. This paper covers a 15-year period of studying those factors that have a major influence on the sediment yield and transport during individual hydrological events in a small Mediterranean agricultural watershed. Multivariate statistical techniques such as cluster analysis and principal component analysis were applied for the interpretation of datasets. In addition, the relationships between suspended sediment concentration and discharge (hysteretic loops) were also analysed. The hydrological response of the studied watershed is mainly controlled by the antecedent condition of the flow. Most of the runoff and sediment are generated during the wet season when vegetation cover is scant and saturation overland flow occurs promptly as a response to almost any rainfall events. In contrast, during the dry seasons even if high-intensity rainfalls normally occur, very scant runoffs are, however recorded, at the exit of the watershed. Most of the eroded sediment seems to come from riparian areas. The discharge registered at the watershed outlet up to 1 h prior to the flood is a very good surrogate for antecedent soil moisture.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Evaluación de la producción de sedimentos y calidad de las aguas en cuencas agrarias de Navarra
    (Universidad de La Rioja, 2012) Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Díez Beregaña, Javier; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak; Gobierno de Navarra / Nafarroako Gobernua
    The Government of Navarre (Spain) established a series of experimental watersheds on different sites of its territory in order to assess the impact of the agricultural activities on the environment. Hydrological/meteorological and water quality data are continuously monitored. In this paper, data recorded –precipitation, runoff, sediment, nitrate and phosphate– in two grain-sown watersheds (La Tejería and Latxaga) and in a third one (Oskotz) covered with forest and pasture (cattle-breeding) with a sub-watershed almost entirely under forest, are analyzed; the information covers a period of ca. 15 years. The inter/intra annual variability of the involved processes are studied as well as their impact on the water quality and on the ecosystem. The majority of the sediments yielded in the watersheds are registered during winter, though most of the erosive rainfalls occurred in summer. This is because of the easy-prone runoff that prevailed during winter due to the (much) higher water content of the soils in this period. The grain-sown watersheds –roughly similar at first view– present however important differences regarding sediment yield: 1800 kg/ha year at La Tejería and only 450 kg/ha year at Latxaga. This could be mainly due to differences in morphology, topography, and amount of stream channel vegetation between both sites. At Oskotz this figures are as a whole lower than those registered in the cultivated watersheds but eventually larger than those at Latxaga; this depending on the forest management (logging). Water quality is seriously affected at La Tejería with nitrate concentration constantly over critical threshold. By contrast, nitrate values are much lower in Latxaga watershed. However, phosphate concentrations were similar in both grain-sown watersheds corresponding to water with a significant risk of eutrophication. The cattle-breeding activity at Oskotz generated unexpected levels of phosphate much higher than those registered in the cultivated wathersheds.