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Dans la dernière décennie, le Québec a été touché par plusieurs épisodes d’inondations majeures. C’est le cas des communautés riveraines de Pointe-Gatineau, frappées par des inondations historiques en 2017, 2019 et 2023. Depuis, le départ d’une grande partie des riverains de ce quartier socio-économiquement défavorisé et la destruction de plusieurs maisons laissent un grand vide. La présence de nombreux lots vacants amène de l’incertitude parmi les citoyen.nes qui sont resté.es, dans ce qui est considéré comme l’un des plus vieux quartiers de Gatineau (Conseil régional de l'environnement et du développement durable de l'Outaouais, 2021). Bien que ce domaine d’étude soit en émergence, on observe dans la littérature que l’attachement des individus à leur milieu suivant une ou des catastrophes exercerait une influence sur leur processus de rétablissement. Cette étude s’intéresse donc au processus de rétablissement d’individus provenant d’un quartier socioéconomiquement défavorisé qui ont vécu un cumul d’inondations, et au rôle de l’attachement au lieu dans ce processus. Cette recherche mobilise le cadre de désorientation et de réorientation proposé par Cox et Perry (2011) pour expliquer le processus de rétablissement d’individus dans un lieu modifié par un désastre. L’attachement au lieu est conceptualisé en fonction des dimensions recensées par Raymond et ses collègues (2010) et du sentiment d’être chez soi par Cox et Perry (2011). Quatorze personnes sinistrées qui ont vécu les inondations de 2017 et de 2019 dans le quartier de Pointe-Gatineau ont été rencontrées lors d’entrevues individuelles ou familiales en 2023. Parmi ce nombre, neuf demeurent encore dans les communautés riveraines de Pointe-Gatineau, alors que cinq ont quitté le quartier après les inondations de 2019. Les résultats révèlent que l’attachement au lieu joue un rôle prédominant dans le processus de rétablissement des sinistré.es. Selon les participant.es, l’attachement au lieu contribue à l’étape de désorientation ou favorise au contraire la réorientation. Les résultats soulignent en particulier que l’attachement que les participant.es ressentent envers leur domicile et leur environnement naturel et bâti constitue une motivation importante à vouloir demeurer dans le quartier inondable. Par contre, la recherche montre que des facteurs autres que la relation au lieu influencent également le processus de rétablissement, tels que la difficulté à naviguer dans les démarches administratives entourant les programmes d’indemnisation du gouvernement, le fait d’appartenir à un groupe vulnérable, le soutien social et certaines caractéristiques personnelles. De même, l’expérience de vivre plusieurs inondations amène des spécificités qui influencent elles aussi le processus de rétablissement. Les résultats dévoilent notamment des stratégies d’adaptation mises en place par les personnes participantes qui ont décidé de demeurer dans leur quartier. Les stratégies acquises avec l’expérience font en sorte qu’elles se sentent davantage préparées pour des éventuelles inondations. Cette recherche contribue à la littérature émergente qui s’intéresse au processus de rétablissement d’individus touchés par un cumul d’inondations et au rôle de l’attachement au lieu sur ce processus. Elle permet d’offrir des pistes de réflexion aux différents acteurs qui accompagnent les personnes sinistrées avant, pendant et après des inondations et propose des recommandations en ce sens.
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Peatlands are relatively common in the province of Quebec (Canada) where they occupy about 12% of the surface. The hydrology of peatlands remains insufficiently documented, more specifically during the spring period where data are currently lacking in many regions, including in the Quebec boreal territory. The paucity of spring data are due to snowmelt that causes flooding in peatlands and along rivers, which makes hydrometry complicated during this period of the year. In this paper, the Peatland Hydrological Impact Model (PHIM) was coupled with a snowmelt module (CemaNeige) to simulate spring flows in an ombrotrophic peatland located in the Romaine River watershed (Quebec). Discharge data from two summer seasons (2019 and 2020) were used to calibrate the hydrological model. Despite the relatively short time series, the results show a good performance. The simulated spring flows resulting from the PHIM + CemaNeige combination are of the right order of magnitude.
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The objective of this study is to analyze the temporal variability in water levels of Lake Mégantic (27.4 km2) during the period 1920–2020 in relation to anthropogenic and natural factors on the one hand, and its impact on the intensity and frequency of heavy flooding (recurring floods ≥ 10 years) of the Chaudière River of which it is the source, on the other hand. The application of four different Mann–Kendall tests showed a significant decrease in lake water levels during this period. The Lombard test revealed two breaks in the average daily maximum and average water levels, but only one break in the average daily minimum water levels. The first shift, which was smoothed, occurred between 1957 and 1963. It was caused by the demolition in 1956 of the first dam built in 1893 and the significant storage of water in the dams built upstream of the lake between 1956 and 1975. The second shift, which was rather abrupt, occurred between 1990 and 1993. It was caused by the voluntary and controlled lowering of the lake’s water levels in 1993 to increase the surface area of the beaches for recreational purposes. However, despite this influence of anthropogenic factors on this drop in water levels, they are negatively correlated with the global warming climate index. It is therefore a covariation, due to anthropogenic factors whose impacts are exerted at different spatial scales, without a physical causal link. However, the winter daily minimum water levels, whose temporal variability has not been influenced by anthropogenic activities, are positively correlated with the NAO and AO indices, but negatively with PDO. Finally, since the transformation of Lake Mégantic into a reservoir following the construction of the Mégantic dam in 1893 and 1973 to control heavy flooding in the Chaudière River, all recurrent floods ≥ 10 years have completely disappeared in the section of this river located downstream of Lake Mégantic. However, the disappearance of these floods and the drop in water levels of Lake Mégantic have not significantly impacted the stationarity in the flow series of the Chaudière River since 1920.
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Abstract Quebec is experiencing a significant increase in summer and fall temperatures and rainfall. This study compares the spatiotemporal variability of maximum daily flows generated by rainfall during the fall season (September–December) in relation to this climatic change and physiographic and land use factors. Analysis of the spatial variability of these maximum flows measured from 1930 to 2018 in 17 watersheds revealed that the magnitude of flows is approximately twice as low on the north shore as it is on the south shore south of 47° N. This difference is explained by three main factors: wetlands (negative correlation) and agricultural (positive correlation) surface area, and summer–fall total precipitation (positive correlation). As for the temporal variability of flows, the different Mann–Kendall statistical tests showed a significant increase in flows due to increased rainfall. The increase of flows was more widespread on the north shore than on the south because the storage capacity of wetlands and other water bodies does not change over time to store excess rainfall. On the south shore, the increase in flows over time is limited due to the significant reduction in agricultural areas since the modernization of agriculture. This reduction favored infiltration to the detriment of runoff.
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Abstract The objective of this study is to compare the spatiotemporal variability of seasonal daily mean flows measured in 17 watersheds, grouped into three homogeneous hydroclimatic regions, during the period 1930–2023 in southern Quebec. With regard to spatial variability, unlike extreme daily flows, seasonal daily mean flows are very poorly correlated with physiographic factors and land use and land cover. In fall, they are not correlated with any physiographic or climatic factor. In winter, they are positively correlated with the rainfall and winter daily mean maximum temperatures. In spring, they are strongly correlated positively with the snowfall but negatively with the spring daily mean maximum temperatures. However, in summer, they are better correlated with forest area and, to a lesser extent, with the rainfall. As for their temporal variability, the application of six different statistical tests revealed a general increase in daily mean flows in winter due to early snowmelt and increased rainfall in fall. In summer, flows decreased significantly in the snowiest hydroclimatic region on the south shore due to the decrease in the snowfall. In spring, no significant change in flows was globally observed in the three hydroclimatic regions despite the decrease in the snowfall due to the increase in the rainfall. In fall, flows increased significantly south of 47°N on both shores due to the increase in the rainfall. This study demonstrates that, unlike extreme flows, the temporal variability of seasonal daily average flows is exclusively influenced by climatic variables in southern Quebec. Due to this influence, seasonal daily mean flows thus appear to be the best indicator for monitoring the impacts of changes in precipitation regimes and seasonal temperatures on river flows in southern Quebec.