4.7 Article

Land use effects on surface runoff and soil erosion in a southern Alpine valley

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 435, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2023.116505

Keywords

Rainfall simulation; Land use change; Landscape Stability; Soil water repellence; Soil erosion; Agricultural terraces

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In mountain regions, changes in land use greatly affect surface runoff and soil erosion. This study in a southern Alpine valley in Switzerland found that the increase in surface runoff due to soil water repellency did not have a corresponding high sensitivity to soil erosion. The high aggregate stability of the soil prevented significant sediment transport, except in abandoned and reforested agricultural terraces.
In mountain regions, soil landscapes are highly vulnerable against soil loss. Moreover, these environments are particularly affected by land use changes, which influence soil properties and related processes like surface runoff generation and soil erosion. These processes are in turn amplified by extreme climatic events and intensive geomorphological dynamics. The objective of this study is to quantitatively assess the effects of land use changes on surface runoff and soil erosion in a southern Alpine valley (Onsernone valley, Switzerland) characterized by a former intense land use followed by a progressive abandonment in the last decades. Surface runoff and related sediment transport has been analysed under controlled and reproducible conditions using a portable rainfall simulator device (1 m2). The results show a statistically significant increase in surface runoff when the soil gets water repellent reducing the surface infiltration capacity and generating preferential flow paths, which prevent a homogeneous wetting of the soil. However, the documented high sensitivity of surface runoff to land use changes does not result in an equally high sensitivity to soil erosion processes. Instead, soils display a high aggregate stability leading to very low sediment transports except for abandoned and reforested agricultural terraces. There, the lack of maintenance and progressive collapse of terrace dry walls locally increase slope angles and directly exposes the soil to atmospheric agents and surface runoff, which causes soil erosion rates beyond the customary natural level.

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