๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
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Field measurement of the sheltering effect of vegetation on erodible land surfaces

โœ Scribed by P. H. Stockton; D. A. Gillette


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1990
Tongue
English
Weight
738 KB
Volume
2
Category
Article
ISSN
1085-3278

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โœฆ Synopsis


Natural vegetation on erodible land surfaces, such as the loose sandy soils found in the southwestern United States and in Soviet Central Asia, absorbs part of the wind momentum flux (stress) and thus protects the erodible soil to a degree that depends on the geometry of plant distribution and profile. The sheltering effect of natural plants may be expressed as the ratio, R, of threshold friction velocity for the bare soil (determined in the laboratory or in specially prepared areas of bare soil in the field) to that for the naturally vegetated surface. We used new automated instrumentation to detect erosion thresholds in locations where erosion events are widely separated in time. Measured values of R were low for our most vegetated sites and nearer unity for the sparsely vegetated site.


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