Plant roots reduce rill detachment and shallow instability in forest topsoils

被引:3
作者
Parhizkar, Misagh [1 ]
Zema, Demetrio Antonio [2 ]
Lucas-Borja, Manuel Esteban [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Guilan, Fac Agr Sci, Dept Soil Sci, Rasht, Iran
[2] Mediterranean Univ Reggio Calabria, Agr Dept, I-89122 Reggio Di Calabria, Italy
[3] Castilla Mancha Univ, Sch Adv Agr & Forestry Engn, Dept Agroforestry Technol Sci & Genet, Campus Univ S-N, E-02071 Albacete, Spain
关键词
Aggregate stability; Erosion; Rill erodibility; Root length density; Root mass density; Slope; SOIL AGGREGATE STABILITY; LOESS PLATEAU; OVERLAND-FLOW; SEDIMENT TRANSPORT; SURFACE RUNOFF; MASS MOVEMENT; EROSION; WATER; REINFORCEMENT; CAPACITY;
D O I
10.1016/j.rhisph.2024.100921
中图分类号
S3 [农学(农艺学)];
学科分类号
0901 ;
摘要
The competition between tree and grass roots for water and nutrients under the canopies of forest species may reduce the grass cover and thus increase rill erosion and shallow instability up to the values that are typical of the bare soils. This study has carried out flume experiments at different soil slopes and water flow rates, in order to evaluate rill detachment capacity (Dc) and erodibility (Kr) as well as the stability factors of hillslopes with Gleditsia caspica L. (a Fabaceae species, commonly called 'Persian honeylocust', a local endemic tree of Northern Iran) in comparison to bare soils. The variability of Dc has been associated to soil aggregate stability and plant root characteristics as key descriptors of rill erosion and surface stability. Dc was significantly lower (-41%) in the soil under the canopies compared to the bare sites. This was due to the higher soil aggregate stability (+83%) as well as to the denser and more extended plant root system, as confirmed by the negative correlations between Dc and soil and root parameters including root total length, mass density and specific root length. Kr was instead similar for the two soil conditions. The root system of the surface soil layer also played a beneficial action for slope stabilization, increasing the mean safety factor between soils with Gleditsia caspica and bare soils to 1.52 (well over the threshold of 1.3 identifying possible shallow instability). However, this safety factor was the highest at the lower slopes (1.63), and decreased with slope down to 1.39 in the steepest soils. Overall, this study provides indications to land managers on how to contrast soil erosion and shallow instability in delicate forestlands under semi-arid conditions.
引用
收藏
页数:8
相关论文
共 82 条
[1]   Quantifying the effects of root reinforcement of Persian Ironwood (Parrotia persica) on slope stability; a case study: Hillslope of Hyrcanian forests, northern Iran [J].
Abdi, Ehsan ;
Majnounian, Baris ;
Genet, Maria ;
Rahimi, Hassan .
ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2010, 36 (10) :1409-1416
[2]  
Abedi R., 2011, Caspian Journal of Environmental Sciences, V9, P115
[3]   FIELD MEASUREMENT OF THE VELOCITY OF OVERLAND-FLOW USING DYE TRACING [J].
ABRAHAMS, AD ;
PARSONS, AJ ;
LUK, SH .
EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 1986, 11 (06) :653-657
[4]   A review of hillslope and watershed scale erosion and sediment transport models [J].
Aksoy, H ;
Kavvas, ML .
CATENA, 2005, 64 (2-3) :247-271
[5]   Cover crop root-derived organic carbon influences aggregate stability through soil internal forces in a clayey red soil [J].
Ali, Waqar ;
Hussain, Sadeed ;
Chen, Jiazhou ;
Hu, Feinan ;
Liu, Jingfang ;
He, Yangbo ;
Yang, Mingxuan .
GEODERMA, 2022, 429
[6]  
Bibalani G.H., 2006, Int. J. Environ. Sci. Tech., V2, P381
[7]  
Blaschke PM, 2000, PROG PHYS GEOG, V24, P21, DOI 10.1191/030913300669154532
[8]   Mulching as best management practice to reduce surface runoff and erosion in steep clayey olive groves [J].
Bombino, Giuseppe ;
Denisi, Pietro ;
Alfonso Gomez, Jose ;
Zema, Demetrio Antonio .
INTERNATIONAL SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION RESEARCH, 2021, 9 (01) :26-36
[9]   Soil structure and management: a review [J].
Bronick, CJ ;
Lal, R .
GEODERMA, 2005, 124 (1-2) :3-22
[10]   Soil reinforcement by the roots of six dominant species on eroded mountainous manly slopes (Southern Alps, France) [J].
Burylo, M. ;
Hudek, C. ;
Rey, F. .
CATENA, 2011, 84 (1-2) :70-78