4.4 Article

Comparative rates of wind versus water erosion from a small semiarid watershed in southern Arizona, USA

Journal

AEOLIAN RESEARCH
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages 197-204

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aeolia.2011.03.006

Keywords

MWAC; Rangelands; Sediment flux; Sediment yield; Erosion

Funding

  1. USDA Agricultural Research Service, Southwest Watershed Research Center
  2. Western Development Action, Chinese Academy of Science [KZCX2-XB2-07-01]
  3. Chinese National Science and Technology Infrastructure Program [2008BAD98B04]

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The relative erosion rates of wind and water erosion have rarely been studied simultaneously and are poorly quantified. In this study, wind and water erosion rates were simultaneously measured and compared over 2 yrs for a small rangeland watershed in the Santa Rita Experimental Range in southern Arizona. Average horizontal, wind-driven sediment flux was 7.0 g m(-1) d(-1) during the study period. The combined soil erosion rate by water and wind was 7.60 t ha(-1) yr(-1), with only 0.08 t ha(-1) yr(-1) attributed to wind during the 2 yrs. The results of this study showed that rates of soil erosion by water greatly exceeded rates of erosion by wind during the study period in this small watershed. Comparison between these results and other recent studies in the same area suggest that measurements of horizontal sediment fluxes by wind and water are not necessarily indicative of relative net soil erosion rates on a unit area basis because the measurements of the wind flux sediment cannot be considered as mass of soil loss per unit area per unit time. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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