Scale effects on runoff and soil erosion in rangelands: estimations with predictors of different availability Observations and

被引:34
作者
Martinez, Gonzalo [1 ,2 ]
Weltz, Mark [3 ]
Pierson, Frederick B. [4 ]
Spaeth, Kenneth E. [5 ]
Pachepsky, Yakov [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Cordoba, Dept Agron, E-14071 Cordoba, Spain
[2] USDA ARS, Environm Microbial & Food Safety Lab, Beltsville, MD 20705 USA
[3] USDA ARS, Great Basin Rangelands Res, Reno, NV 89512 USA
[4] USDA ARS, Northwest Watershed Res Ctr, Boise, ID 83712 USA
[5] USDA NRCS, Cent Natl Technol Support Ctr, Ft Worth, TX 76115 USA
关键词
Soil erosion; Runoff; Scale; Regression trees; Soil surface properties; SEDIMENT YIELD; VEGETATION CHANGE; INTERRILL RUNOFF; ROCK FRAGMENTS; RAINFALL; MODEL; WATER; INFILTRATION; GENERATION; PATTERNS;
D O I
10.1016/j.catena.2016.12.011
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Runoff and erosion estimates are needed for rangeland management decisions and evaluation of ecosystem services derived from rangeland conservation practices. The information on the effect of scale on runoff and erosion and on the choice of runoff and erosion predictors remains scarce. The objective of this work was to evaluate the effect of scale on the selection of runoff and erosion predictors with the data from rich National Range Study database containing data from 444 coupled large (3.05 m by 9.1 m) and small (0.61 m by 122 m) plot field experiments. With data from both plot sizes, we assessed the usefulness of adding site-specific soil surface information to basic soil and rainfall data in order to estimate runoff and erosion in rangelands. We observed the scale-dependence of the runoff coefficient and the sediment yield. Smaller values of both variables were found at large plots as compared to small plots. Regression trees were used to build predictive relationships and evaluate the relative importance of predictors. Rainfall and basic soil properties were identified as the major predictors of runoff coefficients and sediment yields at both scales. Differences in the importance of predictors were observed between the two plot sizes and between predictions of runoff and sediment yield at the same plot sizes. The antecedent soil water content was not as important as rainfall parameters. Overall, including site-specific soil surface properties did not improve the predictability of the runoff coefficient and the sediment yield. The difference in runoff and sediment yield between small and large plots was found most likely because the small plots only contained a single soil/vegetation expression, whereas there was a matrix of vegetation clumps and bare interspaces arranged in a non-uniform pattern at the large plots. The variability of runoff and sediment yield may depend on how the latter pattern expresses itself in each of the large plots. More research or a different approach is required to account for vegetation-driven spatial hydrologic processes and their influence on rangeland runoff and soil erosion processes. Published by Elsevier B.V.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 173
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Land use effects on surface runoff and soil erosion in a southern Alpine valley
    Bettoni, Manuele
    Maerker, Michael
    Bosino, Alberto
    Conedera, Marco
    Simoncelli, Laura
    Vogel, Sebastian
    GEODERMA, 2023, 435
  • [32] The impact of vegetative cover type on runoff and soil erosion under different land uses
    Mohammad, Ayed G.
    Adam, Mohammad A.
    CATENA, 2010, 81 (02) : 97 - 103
  • [33] Artificial neural networks of soil erosion and runoff prediction at the plot scale
    Licznar, P
    Nearing, MA
    CATENA, 2003, 51 (02) : 89 - 114
  • [34] Temporal variability of soil management effects on soil hydrological properties, runoff and erosion at the field scale in a hillslope vineyard, North-West Italy
    Biddoccu, Marcella
    Ferraris, Stefano
    Pitacco, Andrea
    Cavallo, Eugenio
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2017, 165 : 46 - 58
  • [35] Plot-scale effects on runoff and erosion along a slope degradation gradient
    Moreno-de las Heras, Mariano
    Nicolau, Jose M.
    Merino-Martin, Luis
    Wilcox, Bradford P.
    WATER RESOURCES RESEARCH, 2010, 46
  • [36] Grid-based distribution model for simulating runoff and soil erosion from a large-scale river basin
    Wang, Guoqiang
    Hapuarachchi, H. A. P.
    Takeuchi, Kuniyoshi
    Ishidaira, Hiroshi
    HYDROLOGICAL PROCESSES, 2010, 24 (05) : 641 - 653
  • [37] Land use and climate change impacts on runoff and soil erosion at the hillslope scale in the Brazilian Cerrado
    Anache, Jamil A. A.
    Flanagan, Dennis C.
    Srivastava, Anurag
    Wendland, Edson C.
    SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 2018, 622 : 140 - 151
  • [38] A fully coupled superficial runoff and soil erosion basin scale model with efficient time stepping
    Gatti, Federico
    Bonaventura, Luca
    Menafoglio, Alessandra
    Papini, Monica
    Longoni, Laura
    COMPUTERS & GEOSCIENCES, 2023, 177
  • [39] The Effects of Runoff and Erosion Hydrodynamics by Check Dams Under Different Precipitation Types in the Watershed of Loess Plateau
    Zhang, Naichang
    Feng, Yangfan
    Xia, Zhaohui
    Li, Peng
    Yue, Fan
    Cao, Yongxiang
    Wang, Pengfei
    Wang, Tian
    Guo, Xingyue
    Zhou, Shixuan
    WATER, 2025, 17 (07)
  • [40] Effects of soil crust and crop on runoff and erosion in Loess Plateau
    Ma, Bo
    Ma, Fan
    Li, Zhanbin
    Wu, Faqi
    ACTA AGRICULTURAE SCANDINAVICA SECTION B-SOIL AND PLANT SCIENCE, 2014, 64 (08) : 645 - 656