September-October 2009

Erosion and Sediment Control After Natural Disasters

Getting the critical first steps right

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Fire: A f t e r N a t u r a l D i s a s t e r s

Photo: ©iStock.com/Scott Vickers

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By Carol Brzozowski

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Post-Fire Measures
Mike Harding, CPESC, of Great Circle International, frequently is called in as a consultant on how to prevent erosion following fires. He has pointed out that a fire/flood cycle speaks to how risks are taken when people build “in harm’s way.”

“You see a lot of things in the field that are preexisting conditions that are going to be exacerbated by a fire and flood,” he told Erosion Control magazine in 2005. “People need to be thinking about building retention structures or dirt drainage or diversion structures, because these areas are always going to burn at some point in the future. You need to have permanent control mechanisms in place instead of just worrying about going in after these fires and shooting a little mulch.”

With fires, the erosion control focus usually comes after the disaster. The primary consequence of fires is they burn off the vegetal cover and the vegetation—particularly low canopy vegetation, herbaceous vegetation, grass, and, to a lesser extent, bushes, says Gray.

“That’s very often followed by serious erosion problems in the year after the burn,” he says.

It is of prime importance to establish grass and vegetation cover on the burned-over areas right after a fire, Gray says. He cites the Oakland Hills, CA, fire of October 1991, when flames fanned by hot dry winds blowing from the Central Valley consumed 1,800 acres of the Oakland and Berkeley hills, resulting in 25 deaths and the destruction of 2,903 dwellings.

“They did extensive revegetation work in those hills to try to minimize the erosion the following year,” says Gray.

Standard vegetative treatment after a fire includes seeding and hydromulching. Gray says this work is often supplemented by doing bioengineering with live fascines, which are sausage-like bundles of live-cut branches of wetland and streamside materials, usually willow or dogwood.

The bundles are placed into streambank trenches so that they grow perpendicular to the bank, providing protective vegetative over and a root structure to stabilize banks.

Another erosion control measure is straw rolls or wattles, placed across a slope in an attempt to slow down runoff velocity and enhance germination. Erosion control blankets also are used to help establish vegetation and provide temporary erosion control.

Aerial hydroseeding also can be employed, depending on the size of the damaged area. Hydroseeding can be also be executed from hydroseeding machines or truck-mounted tanks, says Gray.

“They are aimed and sprayed at the slope,” says Gray. “You can cover some pretty large areas with that.”

Understanding Landslides
In the case of flooding and landslides, preventative erosion control measures can be used to minimize damage that can occur in areas prone to such disasters.

After landslides, the problem is a “very disturbed condition that is vulnerable to a whole host of erosion processes,” says Gray. “Landslides disturb the slope, weaken the soil, and make it vulnerable to advanced erosion, such as gullying.

“In this case, you have to look at potential schemes for stopping gullies from forming,” says Gray, adding that the goal is to prevent them from recurring.

One example of gully control is that of check dams, he says. These are temporary or permanent barriers that slow water velocity and help prevent erosion.

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“You’ve got to be careful how you install check dams; otherwise, you can get washout around them unless they’re well inset into the channel,” he says.

Live gully repair is an effective soil bioengineering technique, he adds. The technique involves the use of live cuttings and compacted soil to hold the repair. Next Page >

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