Erosion hidrica del suelo - USLE - Parte 2 de 5 - FACTOR R - ArcGIS ONLINE

Erosion hidrica del suelo - USLE - Parte 2 de 5 - FACTOR R - ArcGIS ONLINE

Erosión Hídrica del Suelo: Parte 2

Introducción a la Ecuación Universal de Pérdida de Suelos

  • Se presenta la segunda parte del tutorial sobre erosión hídrica del suelo, enfocándose en la determinación del factor R y su cálculo.

Insumos Necesarios para el Cálculo

  • Para estimar el parámetro R se requieren tres insumos fundamentales:
  • Modelo digital de elevación de la cuenca.
  • Polígono del área de estudio.
  • Precipitaciones mensuales durante al menos 20 años.

Revisión de Conceptos Previos

  • Se recuerda que en la sesión anterior se presentó la ecuación universal de pérdida de suelo: A = R * K * L * S * C * P.
  • El enfoque actual es el coeficiente R, que tiene unidades (mega julios por milímetro por hectárea), mientras que otros parámetros son adimensionales.

Cálculo del Factor R

  • El factor R aglutina toda la energía erosiva de las lluvias. Para calcularlo mensualmente, se suman todas las energías asociadas a los eventos de lluvia y se multiplican por su intensidad en intervalos específicos.

Ejemplo Práctico y Consideraciones

  • Se explica cómo calcular el factor mensual sumando las energías individuales obtenidas durante diferentes eventos pluviales dentro del mes.
  • La dificultad radica en obtener datos precisos sobre lluvias parciales; generalmente, solo están disponibles datos mensuales.

Método para Calcular Energía Pluvial

  • La energía de lluvia se calcula mediante una fórmula establecida por varios autores, incluyendo Mich en 1978. Esta fórmula considera logaritmos basados en la intensidad pluvial.

Ejercicio Aplicado

  • Se presenta un ejercicio práctico donde se analizan eventos pluviales específicos con sus respectivas intensidades y tiempos entre ellos para ilustrar el cálculo del factor R.
  • Las lluvias menores a 13 mm no son consideradas, y hay criterios sobre el tiempo entre eventos para incluirlos en los cálculos.

Este formato proporciona un resumen claro y estructurado que facilita el estudio y comprensión del contenido presentado en el tutorial sobre erosión hídrica del suelo.

Energy Calculation and Rainfall Analysis

Energy Unit Calculation

  • The precipitation is divided by a specific value and then by 60 to convert units, resulting in an intensity of 20 millimeters per hour.
  • To estimate the unit energy in megajoules per hectare hours, a formula involving logarithmic calculations based on the previously calculated intensity is applied.
  • Effective energy is derived by multiplying unit energy with the initial precipitation value, yielding a total of 15.12 megajoules per millimeter per hectare.

Event R Factor Determination

  • To find the R factor for rainfall events, it’s necessary to multiply by a defined intensity (e.g., 60 mm/hour).
  • The calculated R factor for this event amounts to 906 megajoules per millimeter per hectare.

Monthly Rainfall Data Analysis

  • Monthly rainfall records from various stations in Manabí province are utilized for potential erosion estimation.
  • After analyzing 51 years of data, results are compiled but not shown due to complexity; focus remains on average annual precipitation.

Precipitation Distribution Methodology

  • Annual precipitation must be transformed into daily values using monthly distribution percentages obtained from multi-year analysis.
  • Percentages indicating monthly rainfall distribution are multiplied by annual totals to derive monthly figures.

Daily and Intensity Calculations

  • Monthly precipitation is divided by an estimated number of rain events (15), providing daily averages.
  • For calculating rainfall intensity over 30 minutes, daily distributions are analyzed; significant contributions occur within the first two hours.

Final Calculations and Results Compilation

  • A regression analysis yields a formula that determines the percentage contribution of half-hourly rainfall.
  • By multiplying intensity values with corresponding energies, total erosivity factors (R values) for each event are computed and summed up for overall assessment.

Summary of Erosivity Factors

  • The final R total reflects cumulative data across multiple days; these figures inform annual erosivity factors used in further analyses.

Understanding the Calculation of Precipitation and Energy

Methodology for Calculating Energy from Precipitation

  • The energy is calculated using a specific methodology applied to annual precipitation events, which will be used to generate a raster for the factor R.
  • Monthly precipitation values are provided (e.g., 22.13, 21.68), with a total monthly precipitation of 30.54 mm being noted for analysis across various stations.
  • Daily precipitation data is referenced, emphasizing the need to distribute this data accurately across different timeframes and copy relevant rows into calculations.

Generating Raster Data

  • The calculated energy values are organized in a table format, which is essential for generating the raster representation of rainfall over specified intervals (e.g., every 30 minutes).
  • A comprehensive table is exported containing all necessary attributes related to rainfall data collected from 37 weather stations in Manabí.

Interpolation and Raster Creation Process

  • The process involves utilizing interpolation tools within software to create a raster based on the rainfall stations' data and their corresponding parameters.
  • Steps include selecting appropriate parameters in the analysis toolbox, ensuring that the generated raster reflects accurate interpolated values.

Finalizing Raster Output

  • Upon completion, an interpolated raster is generated showing specific values at various points; these can be reviewed for accuracy against known benchmarks.
  • A clipping process follows where only relevant areas within defined boundaries (Manabí demarcation) are retained in the final output.

Adjusting Visualization Parameters

  • The newly created raster's name is modified for clarity, indicating it represents factor R; visual properties such as color classification are adjusted for better interpretation.
  • Units of measurement are clarified as megajoules per millimeter per hectare; adjustments ensure that numerical outputs reflect two decimal places for precision in reporting results.

Implications of Results on Erosion Potential

  • Areas exceeding certain thresholds (e.g., R value over 2000 indicates high erosion potential); negative values resulting from interpolation errors must be corrected to zero before final analysis.
  • This concludes part two of the tutorial series focused on calculating potential water erosion through derived factors, setting up future discussions on further calculations involving multiple parameters.
Video description

Erosion hídrica del suelo - USLE - Parte 2 de 5 - DETERMINACIÓN DE FACTOR DE EROSIVIDAD R. Serie de tutoriales cortos para estimar la erosión hídrica del suelo mediante la ECUACIÓN UNIVERSAL DE LA PÉRDIDA DE SUELO