『Abstract
This study examines the effects of impervious surfaces within
urbanized land on the scaling of river discharge with drainage
area. Discharge in a river channel grows as drainage basin area
increases following the general equation Q = kAc, where
Q is river discharge, k is a measure of river base flow, A is
upstream drainage area, and c is the scaling power dependency.
Land use is a critical variable in the examination of river discharge;
discharge has significant geologic and ecologic influences on
fluvial systems. Discharge is assumed to scale linearly or nearly
linearly with drainage area (c 〜1), but in spite of its widespread
application, the relationship has not been explicitly tested with
respect to urbanization. Here we show that in small urban settings
the scaling is nonlinear for peak flows. It is proposed that effective
water loading occurs through a combination of increased runoff
and an increase in the rate of transport to the rivers. These
higher discharges in urban rivers have the potential to increase
erosion, degrade aquatic habitats, and significantly alter channel
forms.
Keywords: discharge; drainage area; land use; watershed; urbanization』
Introduction
Method
Results
Discussion
Acknowledgments
References cited