Morphological development of rills and its relationship with hillslope erosion in the hilly and gully Loess Plateau

被引:0
|
作者
Li P. [1 ]
Huang K. [1 ]
Hu J. [1 ]
Gao J. [2 ]
Hao M. [1 ]
Dang T. [3 ]
Zhang X. [1 ]
机构
[1] College of Geomatics, Xi’an University of Science and Technology, Xi’an
[2] Suide Test Station of Soil and Water Conservation, Yellow River Conservancy Committee of Ministry of Water Resources, Yulin
[3] Yellow River Basin Monitoring Center of Water-Soil Conservation and Eco-Environment, Xi’an
关键词
erosion; field scouring experiments; hilly and gully Loess Plateau; morphology; rills; sediments; slope; TLS;
D O I
10.11975/j.issn.1002-6819.2022.18.010
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Rill erosion has been widely recognized as one of the most important forms of soil erosion on hillslopes. A crucial impact of rill erosion can be also posed on other erosion processes in downslope areas (e.g. gully head retreat). Morphological parameters of rills can provide useful indicators for the initiation and development of rill erosion. Previous studies have investigated the rill morphology in the erosion-deposition processes of hillslopes. However, those experiments were mainly taken in the laboratory. The physiochemical properties of backfill soil used in laboratory experiments are rather different from those of the natural soil in the field. The representative experiments were largely confined to the field erosion processes. It is necessary to explore the rill morphology associated with the erosion processes in the field. In this study, a series of field scouring experiments were conducted to determine the morphological development of rills under the hillslope erosion in the hilly and gully Loess Plateau. Five erosion plots were established on a natural slope of a small catchment (i.e. Xindiangou catchment), particularly with the input flow of hillslopes of 25, 40, 55, 70, and 85 L/min. Terrestrial Laser Scanning (TLS) was employed to acquire the ultra-high terrain information prior to the test. The various morphological parameters of rills were then derived, including the geometric indicators (length, width, and depth of cross sections), derived indicators (the ratio of width to depth, rill density, rill cleavage, and average rill depth), fractal dimension, bifurcation ratio, and geomorphic information entropy. A systematic investigation was also made to determine the effects of indicative morphological parameters on the cumulative erosion and deposition mass, as well as the sediment yield in the hillslope erosion. Results showed that: 1) The width and depth of the cross-sectional rills, the average rill depth and rill cleavage increased as the experiment progressed under all the flow conditions. The width-depth ratio was greatly varied in the input flow rate. The rills were primarily wide and shallow under the low flow condition (25 L/min), while narrow and deep under the moderately low (40 L/min) and high flow (85 L/min) conditions. There was a great change between the narrow-deep and wide-shallow manner under the moderate (55 L/min) and moderately-high (70 L/min) flow conditions. 2) The fractal dimension of rills was found to change slightly under the low flow condition, whereas, there was a considerable change under the rest of the input flow condition. The bifurcation ratio of rills increased under the moderate flow condition, while decreasing under the rest flow condition. Furthermore, the geomorphic information entropy varied significantly under the different flow conditions. However, there was the same change trend of geomorphological information entropy and sediment yield, indicating the dynamic changes of soil erosion. 3) The average rill length, the average depth of cross sections, and the derived average rill depth served as better indicators for the cumulative deposition mass, erosion mass, and sediment yield under the moderately low flow condition. The derived average rill depth was also for the cumulative erosion mass and cumulative sediment yield under the low flow condition. The average width of cross sections, average depth of cross sections, and derived average rill depth better indicated the cumulative erosion mass under the moderately high flow condition. In addition, there was a less significant relationship between the rill morphological parameters and cumulative erosion mass, deposition mass, and sediment yield, as the input flow increased. The finding can provide a strong reference to enhance the current understanding of the processes and mechanisms of hillslope erosion. © 2022 Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:92 / 102
页数:10
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [1] Wang J, Lu P, Valente D, Et al., Analysis of soil erosion characteristics in small watershed of the loess tableland Plateau of China, Ecological Indicators, 137, (2022)
  • [2] Borrelli P, Robinson D A, Panagos P, Et al., Land use and climate change impacts on global soil erosion by water(2015-2070), Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 36, pp. 21994-22001, (2020)
  • [3] Chen Chao, Lei Tingwu, Ban Yunyun, Et al., Effects of slope lengths on rill erosion under different hydrodynamic conditions in black soil sloping farmland of Northeast China, Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering (Transactions of the CSAE), 35, 5, pp. 155-162, (2019)
  • [4] Li Ran, Yu Xinxiao, Cai Qiangguo, Et al., Soil erosion and deposition processes of Loess slopes in Loess Hilly and Gully Region, Bulletin of Soil and Water Conservation, 42, 2, pp. 31-37, (2022)
  • [5] Shen N, Wang Z, Guo Q, Et al., Soil detachment capacity by rill flow for five typical loess soils on the Loess Plateau of China, Soil and Tillage Research, 213, (2021)
  • [6] Li P, Chen J, Zhao G, Et al., Determining the drivers and rates of soil erosion on the Loess Plateau since 1901, Science of the Total Environment, 823, (2022)
  • [7] Jiang Y, Shi H, Wen Z, Et al., The dynamic process of slope rill erosion analyzed with a digital close range photogrammetry observation system under laboratory conditions, Geomorphology, 350, (2020)
  • [8] Qin C, Zheng F, Xu X, Et al., A laboratory study on rill network development and morphological characteristics on loessial hillslope, Journal of Soils and Sediments, 18, 4, pp. 1679-1690, (2018)
  • [9] Zhang P, Tang H, Yao W, Et al., Experimental investigation of morphological characteristics of rill evolution on loess slope, Catena, 137, pp. 536-544, (2016)
  • [10] Ding Wenfeng, Zhang Pingcang, Wang Aijuan, Et al., Comparative study of several measuring methods for soil erosion on slope, Journal of Yangtze River Scientific Research Institute, 32, 11, pp. 14-18, (2015)