Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41819
Title: Flood hazard management in public mountain recreation areas vs. ungauged fluvial basins. Case study of the Caldera de Taburiente National Park, Canary Islands (Spain)
Authors: Garrote, Julio
Diez-Herrero, Andrés
Bodoque, Jose M.
Perucha, Maria A.
Mayer, Pablo L. 
Génova, Mar
UNESCO Clasification: 250507 Geografía física
Keywords: La-Palma
Flash Floods
Orographic Precipitation
Spanish Pyrenees
Catchments, et al
Issue Date: 2018
Journal: Geosciences (Switzerland) 
Abstract: Las Angustias River is an ungauged stream in the Caldera de Taburiente National Park (Spain), where frequent intense flash-flood events occur. The aim of this research is to analyze the flood hazard at the Playa de Taburiente. Based on the limited information available (short time-series of daily precipitation), a statistical frequency analysis of 24 h rainfall was completed and the precipitation results were transformed into surface runoff. To determine if the model underestimates the flows that are generated in the basin, the dendro-geomorphological information available was used to calibrate results. The results of the HMS model were significantly lower. At this point, both the rainfall data and the rainfall-runoff model were re-analyzed to maximize the rainfall intensity values and the runoff generated (increasing the CN value for the basin). For the 1997 flood event, a 1250 m(3).s(-1) flood minimizes the RMSE for the disturbed tree sample; this flow value also clearly exceeds any peak flow derived from the rainfall-runoff analysis. It is only when rainfall intensity and surface runoff are maximized that the peak flows obtained approximate those associated with dendro-geomorphological data. The results highlight the difficulties of flood hazard management in ungauged torrential basins in mountain recreational areas (such as National Parks). Thus, in the absence of flow records, when considering the maximum rainfall intensity scenario may be a useful and effective tool for flood risk management.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/41819
ISSN: 2076-3263
DOI: 10.3390/geosciences8010006
Source: Geosciences (Switzerland) [ISSN 2076-3263], v. 8 (1), 6 (Enero 2018)
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