- 1Universidad Nacional Agraria La Molina, Facultad de Ciencias, Departamento Académico de Ingeniería Ambiental, Lima, Perú (20210718@lamolina.edu.pe)
- 2Universidad Científica del Sur, Departamento Académico de Ingeniería Ambiental, Lima, Perú (mcardenasga@cientifica.edu.pe)
Ephemeral mountain streams on the western Andean slopes remain dry most of the year, yet during intense rainfall events they generate short-lived flash floods with exceptionally high sediment transport capacity. This study investigates the hydraulic response of the upper Río Seco micro-basin (Huaycoloro catchment, Peru) under extreme rainfall scenarios, using a hydraulic–geomorphological framework that links surface hydrology with sediment mobility thresholds. Design discharges were estimated through IDF-based rainfall analysis and classical hydrological methods, while sectional hydraulic modelling using the Manning equation provided flow velocities and bed shear stresses along representative channel reaches. Results indicate mean velocities ranging from 2.4 to 3.4 m/s and shear stresses up to 215 Pa. These values exceed the critical shear stress of the coarse gravel bed by more than five times, indicating generalized sediment mobility and strong incision potential in confined steep reaches. Such conditions promote significant sediment supply from the upper basin, increasing the likelihood of downstream channel aggradation and flood hazard in peri-urban sectors of eastern Lima. To our knowledge, this is the first hydraulic–geomorphological quantification of sediment mobility thresholds in an arid Andean micro-basin under design-storm conditions. The findings provide quantitative evidence supporting the need to transition from purely water-based flood models toward sediment-inclusive risk assessments in steep ephemeral mountain catchments.
How to cite: Rosales Torres, L. and Cárdenas-Gaudry, M.: High-energy sediment dynamics in ephemeral Andean mountain streams: The case of Río Seco, Peru, EGU General Assembly 2026, Vienna, Austria, 3–8 May 2026, EGU26-6006, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu26-6006, 2026.