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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 - 10 of 16
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Gully geometry: what are we measuring?
    (European Geosciences Union, 2015) Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    Much of the research on (ephemeral) gully erosion comprises the determination of the geometry of these eroded channels, especially their width and depth. This is not a simple task due to uncertainty generated by the wide range of variability in gully cross section shapes found in the field. However, in the literature, this uncertainty is not recognized so that no criteria for their measurement are indicated. The aim of this work is to make researchers aware of the ambiguity that arises when characterizing the geometry of an ephemeral gully and similar eroded channels. In addition, a measurement protocol is proposed with the ultimate goal of pooling criteria in future works. It is suggested that the geometry of a gully could be characterized through its mean equivalent width and mean equivalent depth, which, together with its length, define an “equivalent prismatic gully” (EPG). The latter would facilitate the comparison between different gullies.
  • 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.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Relationship of weather types on the seasonal and spatial variability of rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield in the western Mediterranean basin
    (MDPI, 2020) Peña Angulo, D.; Nadal-Romero, Estela; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Ingeniaritza; Institute on Innovation and Sustainable Development in Food Chain - ISFOOD; Ingeniería
    Rainfall is the key factor to understand soil erosion processes, mechanisms, and rates. Most research was conducted to determine rainfall characteristics and their relationship with soil erosion (erosivity) but there is little information about how atmospheric patterns control soil losses, and this is important to enable sustainable environmental planning and risk prevention. We investigated the temporal and spatial variability of the relationships of rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield with atmospheric patterns (weather types, WTs) in the western Mediterranean basin. For this purpose, we analyzed a large database of rainfall events collected between 1985 and 2015 in 46 experimental plots and catchments with the aim to: (i) evaluate seasonal differences in the contribution of rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield produced by the WTs; and (ii) to analyze the seasonal efficiency of the different WTs (relation frequency and magnitude) related to rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield. The results indicate two different temporal patterns: the first weather type exhibits (during the cold period: autumn and winter) westerly flows that produce the highest rainfall, runoff, and sediment yield values throughout the territory; the second weather type exhibits easterly flows that predominate during the warm period (spring and summer) and it is located on the Mediterranean coast of the Iberian Peninsula. However, the cyclonic situations present high frequency throughout the whole year with a large influence extended around the western Mediterranean basin. Contrary, the anticyclonic situations, despite of its high frequency, do not contribute significantly to the total rainfall, runoff, and sediment (showing the lowest efficiency) because of atmospheric stability that currently characterize this atmospheric pattern. Our approach helps to better understand the relationship of WTs on the seasonal and spatial variability of rainfall, runoff and sediment yield with a regional scale based on the large dataset and number of soil erosion experimental stations.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Dissolved solids and suspended sediment dynamics from five small agricultural watersheds in Navarre, Spain: a 10-year study
    (Elsevier, 2019) Merchán Elena, Daniel; Luquin Oroz, Eduardo Adrián; Hernández García, Iker; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Valle de Lersundi, Jokin del; Ingeniaritza; Institute on Innovation and Sustainable Development in Food Chain - ISFOOD; Ingeniería; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    Dissolved solids (DS) and suspended sediment (SS) loads are considered relevant environmental problems. They are related to a wide range of on-site and off-site impacts, such as soil erosion or salinization of water bodies. In this study, the dynamics of DS and SS concentrations and loads were assessed in five small watersheds covering representative agricultural land uses in Navarre (Spain). To this end, discharge, DS and SS concentration data were collected during ten hydrological years at each watershed outlet, and loads were computed from discharge and concentration values. DS concentration followed a seasonal pattern imposed by the availability of water, with higher concentrations recorded in low-flow periods and lower concentration in the high-flow period. SS concentration was extremely variable, with a range of 2–4 orders of magnitude in concentration for any specific discharge. Temporal variations (both intra- and inter-annual) in DS loads were explained by differences in runoff, whereas those of SS were not, being the SS loads associated mainly with specific high flow events. These temporal patterns were observed for both agricultural (this study) and non-agricultural (literature) watersheds. From the data in the Navarrese watersheds and those available in the literature, we inferred that agricultural land use, in general, tends to increase the concentration of both DS and SS. Regarding DS and SS yields, the effects of agricultural land use on DS yields are controlled by the changes in runoff rather than the (small) changes in DS concentration. In this sense, land uses changes expected to increase runoff (i.e., a shift from forested to arable or from rainfed to irrigated agriculture) would increase DS yields. On the other hand, agricultural land use tends to increase SS yields, although the effect is highly variable depending on site-specific factors, both natural (e.g., watershed shape) and anthropogenic (e.g., degree of soil conservation practices). In the Navarrese watersheds, DS yields ranged from 1.1 to 2.2 Mg ha−1 year−1 whereas SS yields ranged from 0.3 to 4.3 Mg ha−1 year−1. DS yields seem to dominate under non-agricultural conditions and in most agricultural land uses at the small watershed scale. On the other hand, SS yields dominate in watersheds with increased soil erosion as a consequence of arable land use over erosion-prone watersheds.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Effect of topography on retreat rate of different gully headcuts in Bardenas Reales area (Navarre, Spain)
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    In Northeast Spain, gullying is a widespread phenomenon. This type of erosion is especially intense in Bardenas Reales (Navarre) where at least two major typical kinds of gully headcut are present. A first group developed in soil material (named, conventional gully headcut), and second group of gully headcut with a sandstone layer as a top horizon (named, sandstone gully headcut). In addition, within the former group, we can distinguish a subgroup of gully headcuts developed in soils particularly prone to piping and tunnelling due to the dispersive condition of the materials (named piping associated gully headcut). In this situation, a question arises: to what extent simple topographic parameters account for the retreat rate of the different kind of gully headcuts observed in the region of Bardenas Reales? The aim of this study was to investigate and gain insight in this issue.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Assessment of soil factors controlling ephemeral gully erosion on agricultural fields
    (Wiley, 2017) Ollobarren del Barrio, Paul; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak; Institute on Innovation and Sustainable Development in Food Chain - ISFOOD; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa
    The soil factor is crucial in controlling and properly modeling the initiation and development of ephemeral gullies (EGs). Usually, EG initiation has been related to various soil properties (i.e. sealing, critical shear stress, moisture, texture, etc.); meanwhile, the total growth of each EG (erosion rate) has been linked with proper soil erodibility. But, despite the studies to determine the influence of soil erodibility on (ephemeral) gully erosion, a universal approach is still lacking. This is due to the complex relationship and interactions between soil properties and the erosive process. A feasible soil characterization of EG erosion prediction on a large scale should be based on simple, quick and inexpensive tests to perform. The objective of this study was to identify and assess the soil properties – easily and quickly to determine – which best reflect soil erodibility on EG erosion. Forty‐nine different physical–chemical soil properties that may participate in establishing soil erodibility were determined on agricultural soils affected by the formation of EGs in Spain and Italy. Experiments were conducted in the laboratory and in the field (in the vicinity of the erosion paths). Because of its importance in controlling EG erosion, five variables related to antecedent moisture prior to the event that generated the gullies and two properties related to landscape topography were obtained for each situation. The most relevant variables were detected using multivariate analysis. The results defined 13 key variables: water content before the initiation of EGs, organic matter content, cation exchange capacity, relative sealing index, two granulometric and organic matter indices, seal permeability, aggregates stability (three index), crust penetration resistance, shear strength and an erodibility index obtained from the Jet Test erosion apparatus. The latter is proposed as a useful technique to evaluate and predict soil loss caused by EG erosion.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Progress in gully erosion research: IV International Symposium on Gully Erosion
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    The classic forms of water erosion of the soil comprise sheet, rill, and gully erosion. According to the concept most generalized, in sheet erosion, thin layers of material are uniformly removed from the soil surface due to the action of an overland flow, in a homogeneous manner, over the area affected. This results in a normally very gradual and inappreciable loss of soil. However, in rill and gully erosion, the soil loss is caused by the intense action of a concentrated flow, which thus triggers the formation of small or large channels, i.e. rills or gullies, although the mechanisms implicated in either form of concentrated flow erosion are not identical. One of the main differences probably lies in the (much) greater interrelation between the roughness of the channel bed and the hydraulics of the water flow observed in a eroded rill, with respect to what occurs in a typical gully. So, the latter, as a physical process, deserves a special and specific study. Gully erosion, of world-wide importance, is catalogued by some of the principal centres devoted to soil resource conservation as being the foremost problem to be solved. As it is one of the most serious forms of water erosion, this phenomenon is capable of generating major soil losses even though it covers limited land surfaces. Additionally, the damage caused by this type of erosion frequently spreads beyond the area directly affected, i.e. through the siltation of lakes and reservoirs due to the large amounts of sediments it originates. Nevertheless, gully erosion has not received the attention that it warrants from the scientific community. For instance, a rapid search through any important virtual library shows that only less than 10% of soil erosion studies published up to now in international scientific journals deal directly and specifically with gully erosion. More research and surveys are required in order to obtain a better understanding of the physical mechanisms involved in this type of erosion, with the ultimate aim of developing accurate prediction algorithms and efficient control and damage prevention systems. In fact, there are so many unanswered questions on this important environment topic that scientists all over the world have been holding periodic meetings, in which the latest knowledge and advances in the study of gully erosion have been expounded. The first of these meetings was held in Leuven (Belgium) in 2000, the second in Sicuani (China) in 2002 and the third in Oxford, Mississippi (U.S.A.) in 2004. On that last occasion, the participants proposed that Pamplona (Spain) should be the seat of the following meeting, to be held in September 2007. This book contains the abstracts both from the key speeches and from the contributions presented in the IV International Symposium on Gully Erosion held in Pamplona, in September, 2007.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Evaluation of 2D models for the prediction of surface depression storage using realistic reference values
    (Wiley, 2016) Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Mezkiritz Barberena, Irantzu; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Álvarez Mozos, Jesús; González de Audícana Amenábar, María; Martínez de Aguirre Escobar, Alejandro; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    Depression storage (DS) is the maximum storage of precipitation and runoff in the soil surface at a given slope. The DS is determined by soil roughness that in agricultural soils is largely affected by tillage. The direct measurement of DS is not straightforward because of the natural permeability of the soil. Therefore, DS has generally been estimated from 2D/3D empirical relationships and numerical algorithms based on roughness indexes and height measurements of the soil surface, respectively. The objective of this work was to evaluate the performance of some 2D models for DS, using direct and reliable measurements of DS in an agricultural soil as reference values. The study was carried out in experimental microplots where DS was measured in six situations resulting from the combination of three types of tillage carried out parallel and perpendicular to the main slope. Those data were used as reference to evaluate four empirical models and a numerical method. Longitudinal altitudinal profiles of the relief were obtained by a laser profilometer. Infiltration measurements were carried out before and after tillage. The DS was largely affected by tillage and its direction. Highest values of DS are found on rougher surfaces mainly when macroforms cut off the dominant slope. The empirical models had a limited performance while the numerical method was the most effective, even so, with an important variability. In addition, a correct hydrological management should take into account that each type of soil tillage affects infiltration rate differently.
  • PublicationOpen Access
    Hydrological effects of the sediments deposited off a hillslope affected by rill erosion: project outlines and preliminary results
    (Universidad Pública de Navarra / Nafarroako Unibertsitate Publikoa, 2007) Giménez Díaz, Rafael; Casalí Sarasíbar, Javier; Campo-Bescós, Miguel; Proyectos e Ingeniería Rural; Landa Ingeniaritza eta Proiektuak
    The main objectives of this project are (i) to evaluate the sedimentation rate generated by rill erosion in a hillslope and the granulometric characteristics of the sediment deposited off this hillslope, and (ii) to determine the incidence of this sediment on the hydrological properties of the sedimentation area. In addition, an extra aim is to gain insight into the spatial and temporal evolution of a rill network under field condition.
  • 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.