Drone-based assessment of microsite-scale hydrological processes promoted by restoration actions in early post-mining ecological restoration stages.

J Environ Manage

Mediterranean Center for Environmental Studies (CEAM Foundation). Joint Research Unit University of Alicante-CEAM, University of Alicante, 03690, Sant Vicent del Raspeig, Alicante, Spain; Department of Ecology, University of Alicante, 03690, Sant Vicent del Raspeig, Alicante, Spain.

Published: December 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Post-mining restoration in dry climates relies on topography, hydrology, and vegetation development to achieve ecosystem recovery.
  • Combining restoration techniques, like sowing and planting, creates a pattern of bare and vegetated soil that enhances water functions.
  • A study using drones found that restoration works better on smooth hillsides than steep ones, leading to better water availability and larger vegetation patches, highlighting the effectiveness of drones for monitoring these efforts.

Article Abstract

A successful choice of post-mining restoration activities in dry climates may depend on relevant features related to topographic characteristics, hydrological processes and vegetation development, which will determine functional recovery in these ecosystems. The combination of different restoration techniques to reestablish vegetation, such as sowing and plantation, implies the interspersion of bare-soil areas with vegetated areas in early plant development stages, which may result in an associated mosaic of hydrologic functioning. In this study, we conducted a drone-based assessment to disentangle the role played by microsite-scale hydrological processes (i.e., planting hole slope, sink volume capacity, individual catchment area, Flow Length Index) promoted by restoration actions in soil protection and vegetation development on the hillside scale. Based on two contrasting restoration scenarios (Steep hillside and Smooth hillside), the different applied restoration treatments conditioned the microtopographic processes on the planting hole scale and, therefore, resource redistribution. The main results showed higher planting hole functionality on the smooth hillsides than on steep hillside, which resulted in greater water availability and bigger vegetation patches. By addressing the role of hydrological processes on the microsite scale, our study contributes substantially to prior knowledge on the relevant factors for ecosystem development and post-mining restoration success. It also demonstrates that high-resolution drone images can be a very useful tool for monitoring restoration actions, especially in large, inaccessible and unstable restored areas.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.119468DOI Listing

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