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- Title
Simulated soil erosion from a semiarid typical steppe watershed using an integrated aeolian and fluvial prediction model.
- Authors
Wang, Xixi; Liu, Tingxi; Li, Fengling; Gao, Ruizhong; Yang, Xiaomin; Duan, Limin; Luo, Yanyun; Li, Rui
- Abstract
Total soil erosion is a result of both aeolian and fluvial processes, which is particularly true in semiarid regions. However, although physically interrelated, these two processes have conventionally been studied and modelled independently. Recently, a few researchers highlighted the importance and need of considering both processes in concert as well as their interactions, but they did not give specific modelling approaches or algorithms. The objectives of this study were to (1) formulate an integrated aeolian and fluvial prediction (IAFP) model, (2) parameterize the IAFP model for a semiarid steppe watershed located in northeastern China by using literature and historical data and (3) use the model to predict soil erosion in the watershed and assess the sensitivity of predicted erosion to environmental factors such as soil moisture and vegetation coverage. The results indicated that the IAFP model can capture the dynamic interactions between aeolian and fluvial erosion processes. For the study watershed, the model predicted a higher occurrence frequency of fluvial erosion than that of aeolian erosion and showed that these two processes almost equivalently contributed to the average total erosion of 0.07 mm year−1 across the simulation period. The 'existing' vegetation cover can provide an overall good protection of the soils, although the vegetation cover was predicted to play a larger role in a drier than a wetter year as well as in controlling aeolian than fluvial erosion. In addition, soil erosion was predicted to be more sensitive to soil moisture than land coverage. A soil moisture level of 0.23-0.25 was determined to be the probable switch point from aeolian-to fluvial-dominant process or vice versa. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
- Subjects
CHINA; SOIL erosion; FLUVIAL geomorphology; WATERSHEDS; SOIL moisture; PLANTS
- Publication
Hydrological Processes, 2014, Vol 28, Issue 2, p325
- ISSN
0885-6087
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/hyp.9579