VIEIRA, Z. C.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/1122013336575751; VIEIRA, Zacarias Caetano.
Resumo:
The growing demands for water resources and the climatic changes and human
activities have been affecting a great deal the runoff and soil erosion processes, which
require quantification and evaluation. In this sense, representative and experimental
basins have been instrumented everywhere for data acquisition, and analysis of these
processes. In the state o f Paraiba, from the 80s on, several initiatives have been taken to
acquire data in experimental and representative catchments, and model relevant
hydrologic and erosion processes using, principally, event-oriented models, which have
been given evidence of their importance to represent the processes at an event basis.
However, to evaluate the effect of climatic and land use changes on basin responses it is
necessary to use appropriate models such as physically based continuous models. In this
research the continuous physically based model MOSEE, a model for soil erosion
estimation, was applied to micro-basins in the representative basins of Sume (RBS) and
its sub-basins, to micro-basins in the experimental basin of Sao Joao do Cariri (BESJC)
and its sub-basins, to simulate runoff and soil erosion using observed data of natural
rainfall considering different proportions of deforestation and afforestation. The model
results agreed quite well with the observed values, and the effects of deforestation on
responses were relevant, mainly on the soil erosion due to the increasing soil
detachment and runoff and sediment transport, while the afforestation had great impact
in reducing runoff and soil erosion. The model results also demonstrated to be very
sensitive to the rainfall variability.