Gully erosion: Impacts, factors and control

被引:804
|
作者
Valentin, C
Poesen, J
Li, Y
机构
[1] IRD, IWMI, NAFRI, Viangchan, RPD, Laos
[2] Katholieke Univ Leuven, Phys & Reg Geog Res Grp, B-3000 Louvain, Belgium
[3] Chinese Acad Agr Sci, Inst AgroEnvironm & Sustainable Dev, Beijing 100081, Peoples R China
关键词
gully erosion; land use change; sediments; soil crusts; erosion control; reservoirs;
D O I
10.1016/j.catena.2005.06.001
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
Gully erosion attracts increasing attention from scientists as reflected by two recent international meetings [Poesen and Valentin (Eds.), Catena 50 (2-4), 87-564; Li et al., 2004. Gully Erosion Under Global Change. Sichuan Science Technology Press, Chengu, China, 354 pp.]. This growing interest is associated with the increasing concern over off-site impacts caused by soil erosion at larger spatial scales than the Cultivated plots. The objective of this paper is to review recent studies on impacts, factors and control of gully erosion and update the review on 'gully erosion and environmental change: importance and research needs' [Poesen et al., 2003. Catena. 50 (2-4), 91-134.]. For the farmers, the development of gullies leads to a loss of crop yields and available land as well as an increase of workload (i.e. labour necessary to cultivate the land). Gullies can also change the mosaic patterns between fallow and cultivated fields, enhancing hillslope erosion in a feedback loop. In addition, gullies tend to enhance drainage and accelerate aridification processes in the semi-arid zones. Fingerprinting the origin of sediments within catchments to determine the relative contributions of potential sediment sources has become essential to identify sources of potential pollution and to develop management strategies to combat soil erosion. In this respect, tracers such as carbon, nitrogen, the nuclear bomb-derived radionuclide 137 Cs, magnetics and the strontium isotopic ratio are increasingly used to fingerprint sediment. Recent studies conducted in Australia, China, Ethiopia and USA showed that the major part of the sediment in reservoirs might have come from gully erosion. Gullies not only occur in marly badlands and mountainous or hilly regions but also more globally in soils subjected to soil crusting such as loess (European belt, Chinese Loess Plateau, North America) and sandy soils (Sahelian zone, north-east Thailand) or in soils prone to piping and tunnelling such as dispersive soils. Most of the time, the gullying processes are triggered by inappropriate cultivation and irrigation systems, overgrazing, log haulage tracks, road building and urbanization. As exemplified by recent examples from all over the world, land use change is expected to have a greater impact on gully erosion than climate change. Yet, reconstructions of historical causes Of gully erosion, using high-resolution stratigraphy, archaeological dating of pottery and C-14 dating of wood and charcoal, show that the main gully erosion periods identified in Europe correspond to a combination not only of deforestation and overuse of the land but also to periods with high frequency of extreme rainfall events. Many techniques have proved to be effective for gully prevention and control, including vegetation cover, zero or reduced tillage, stone bunds, exclosures, terracing and check dams. However, these techniques are rarely adopted by farmers in the long run and at a larger spatial scale because their introduction is rarely associated with a rapid benefit for the farmers in terms of an increase in land or labour productivity and is often contingent upon incentives. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:132 / 153
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] GULLY AND STREAMBANK EROSION AND THE EFFECTIVENESS OF CONTROL MEASURES IN A SEMI-ARID WATERSHED
    Tufekcioglu, Mustafa
    FRESENIUS ENVIRONMENTAL BULLETIN, 2018, 27 (12): : 8233 - 8243
  • [42] Erosion Development of Gully System in Loess Residual Upland Gully Region
    Zhao Xiaoguang
    Song Shijie
    PROCEEDINGS OF SYMPOSIUM FROM CROSS-STRAIT ENVIRONMENT & RESOURCES AND 2ND REPRESENTATIVE CONFERENCE OF CHINESE ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES & ECOLOGICAL CONSERVATION SOCIETY, 2010, : 66 - 70
  • [43] ESTIMATION OF CHANGES IN EROSION GULLY ON A HILLSLOPE
    Nosko, Radovan
    Vyleta, Roman
    Frastia, Marek
    Skrinar, Andrej
    Danacova, Michaela
    WATER RESOURCES, FOREST, MARINE AND OCEAN ECOSYSTEMS CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS, SGEM 2016, VOL III, 2016, : 95 - 102
  • [44] Gully erosion and global change - Preface
    Poesen, J
    Valentin, C
    CATENA, 2003, 50 (2-4) : 87 - 89
  • [45] A QGIS -plugin for gully erosion modeling
    Saad Khan
    Adel Omran
    Dietrich Schröder
    Christian Sommer
    Volker Hochschild
    Michael Märker
    Earth Science Informatics, 2023, 16 : 3269 - 3282
  • [46] Simulating ephemeral gully erosion in AnnAGNPS
    Gordon, L. M.
    Bennett, S. J.
    Bingner, R. L.
    Theurer, F. D.
    Alonso, C. V.
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASABE, 2007, 50 (03) : 857 - 866
  • [47] Gully erosion: Importance and model implications
    Poesen, J
    Vandaele, K
    van Wesemael, B
    MODELLING SOIL EROSION BY WATER, 1998, 55 : 285 - 311
  • [48] Ephemeral gully erosion in northwestern Spain
    Valcárcel, M
    Taboada, MT
    Paz, A
    Dafonte, J
    CATENA, 2003, 50 (2-4) : 199 - 216
  • [49] Gully erosion: A global issue - Preface
    Valentin, C
    Poesen, J
    Li, Y
    CATENA, 2005, 63 (2-3) : 129 - 131
  • [50] OVERVIEW OF DAM GULLY EROSION RESEARCH
    G. J. HANSON
    D. M. TEMPLE
    K. M. ROBINSON
    K. R. COOK
    International Journal of Sediment Research, 2005, (03) : 105 - 115