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6.soil erosion By Allah Dad Khan

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Page 1: 6.soil erosion By Allah Dad Khan
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Soil Erosion and Conservation

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“Erosion”

• a natural leveling process that wears down high places; fills in low places

• agents: running water, ice, wind, gravity, waves

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“accelerated erosion”

• Process by which soil particles are removed, transported and deposited; rate of removal of soil greater than rate of formation

• 500 yrs / inch topsoil

– Caused by removal of vegetation• agents: wind, water

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• Deposition or sedimentation is flip side of erosion.

• the soil that is removed has to go somewhere: wetlands, lakes, streams, atmosphere

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Worldwide

75 billion metric tons soil lost / year(predominantly cropland)

80% cropland: moderate - severe erosion

10% cropland: slight - moderate erosion

highest rates in Asia, Africa, South America

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Short History of Agriculture

Post WWII: – Increase in chemical/mechanical

intensive production practices• Decrease in number of farms• Increase in size of farms

– Production of commodities/export crops• Top 5 commodities (2003)

– Cattle, dairy, corn, soybeans, broilers

– Cheap food policy• Over-production, cost-price squeeze,

consolidation of farms

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Farm CrisisSince 1980’s

• Falling prices• Spiraling overproduction• Bankruptcies, foreclosures

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1. Water erosiona. rainsplash erosion

• Raindrops accelerate as fall until they reach speed at which friction balances gravity– for large raindrops: 30 km / hr– transfer kinetic energy to soil:

• detach soil• destroy structure• transport soil (as much as 0.7 m vertically and

2 m horizontally)• Only in intense rain events; soil stays local

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b. sheet erosion

Water flows smoothly in a thin film over surface; detached soil moves with the water

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c. rill erosion

• Sheet flow concentrates water into channels

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d. gully erosion

• Water cuts deeper into soil, rills coalesce into deep troughs

• cannot (easily) be removed by tillage

• most dramatic, but most soil loss is due to sheet and rill erosion

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Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE)

A = RKLSCPR : rainfall erosivity (intensity, quantity)

K : soil erodibility (erosion rate per unit of R; in Soil Survey)

L : slope lengthS : slope gradientC : cover and management (ratio of soil loss compared to fallow)

P : erosion-control practices

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2. Wind erosion

• Arid and semi-arid climates

• Dry soil; loss of structure; wind can remove soil particles

• Damage is on-site and off-site

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• Smallest detach into suspension (<0.1 mm)

• medium move by saltation (0.1 - 0.5 mm)

• large move by rolling and sliding (creep) > 0.5 mm

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Wind Erosion Model (WEQ)

E = ƒ( ICKLV)I : soil erodibility (slope angle, soil

moisture, structural stability)C : climate factor (wind speed , soil

temp., ppt.)K : roughness factorL : width of field factorV : vegetative cover

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35 mph wind

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loess

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Soil Conservation Measures

US gov’t response to Great Dust Bowl:1. SES---SCS---NRCS

2. 3000 Soil and Water Conservation Districts

3. Shelterbelt Program218 million trees

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Prevention practices:

1. Windbreaks

Plant trees on windward side of crops

30 mph --> 13 mph

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Senegal

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2. Contour plowing

Cultivate with the contour of the slope (rather than parallel to it); lessens water runoff

3. Strip cropping

Plant strips of alternating crops.(Contour strip cropping)

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4. Terracing

on sloping land ; to check water flow

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Inca

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Bolivia

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5. Reclamation of gullies

build dams (manure and straw, concrete, stones, sticks) to collect silt; plant gully

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6. Cover crops or surface mulch (in orchards or vineyards)

protects ground surface between rows or during non-growing season

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6. Conservation tillage

eliminates or restricts tilling

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• In traditional tilling, surface soil is inverted,

• plant residue buried

• bare soil exposed

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In conservation tillage:· leave plant residue on at least 30% of

surface

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No-till:

no plowing, seeds are planted in narrow slits or directly drilled into holes

17.5% US cropland in 2000

increases need for herbicide

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Conservation methods in construction:

• schedule during low rain• work one area at a time• cover soil immediately (vegetation,

straw,etc)• control runoff to prevent gullies• trap sediment

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Open-top culvert on logging road

lead runoff water off of road

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Sedimentation pond

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Catch sediment

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bioengineering

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Riprap channelguide runoff, prevent gullies, reduce

soil loss

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