## Abstract Flume experiments simulating concentrated runoff were carried out on remolded silt loam soil samples (0ยท36 ร 0ยท09 ร 0ยท09 m^3^) to measure the effect of rainfallโinduced soil consolidation and soil surface sealing on soil erosion by concentrated flow for loessโderived soils and to establ
The effect of conservation tillage on runoff erosivity and soil erodibility during concentrated flow
โ Scribed by A. Knapen; J. Poesen; G. Govers; S. De Baets
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 503 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0885-6087
- DOI
- 10.1002/hyp.6702
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โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Crop residues in conservation tillage systems are known to cause both a reduction in the erosive runoff power and an increase in the topsoil erosion resistance. In this study, the relative importance of both mechanisms in reducing soil loss by concentrated flow erosion is examined. Therefore, a method to calculate the effective flow shear stress responsible for soil detachment in the presence of a residue cover is applied. The determination of effective flow shear stress is based on the recalculation of the hydraulic radius for residue treatments. The method was tested in a laboratory flume by comparing soil detachment rates of identical pairs of soil samples that only differ in the presence or absence of crop residues. This shear stress partitioning approach and a soil detachment correction were then applied to a dataset of soil detachment measurements on undisturbed topsoil samples from a noโtill field plot on a loessโderived soil, sampled during one growing season. Results indicate that only a small fraction (10% on average) of the difference in soil detachment rate between conventional and conservation tillage can be attributed to the dissipation of shear forces on the residues. The remaining decrease in soil detachment during concentrated runoff after a twoโyear application of conservation tillage can be explained by the increased dry bulk density and root and crop residue content in the topsoil that reduces soil erodibility. After correcting for the presence of residues, the temporal variability in soil detachment rates (D~r~) during concentrated flow for a given flow shear stress (ฯ) for both treatments can be predicted fairly well (R^2^ = 0ยท87) from dry soil bulk density (DBD, representing consolidation effects), soil moisture content (SMC, representing antecedent rainfall conditions), the dry mass of organic material (OM, representing root growth and residue decomposition) and saturated soil shear strength ฯ~s, sat~ using an equation of the form:
This study is the first to show that the effect of conservation tillage on soil detachment rates is a result of soil property modifications affecting soil erodibility, rather than a result of the surface residue decreasing flow erosivity. Copyright ยฉ 2007 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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