Use of Cs-137 to estimate tillage- and water-induced soil redistribution rates on agricultural land under different use and management in central-south Chile

Schuller P.; Ellies, A; Castillo A.; Salazar, I.

Abstract

The purpose of this research was to evaluate the applicability of conventional 137Cs sampling and a simplified approach, for estimating medium-term tillage- and water-induced soil erosion and sedimentation rates on agricultural land in Chile. For this purpose, four study sites under contrasting land use and management were selected in central-south Chile. First, a conventional 137Cs approach, based on grid sampling was applied, adapting a mass balance conversion model incorporating soil movement by tillage to the site specific conditions of the study region. Secondly, using the same conversion model, the feasibility of estimating soil redistribution rates from measurements of 137Cs inventories based on composite soil samples taken along contour lines was also tested at all four sites. The redistribution rates associated with tillage and water and the total rates estimated using both methods correlated strongly at all four sites. The conventional method provides more detailed information concerning the redistribution processes operating over the landscape. The simplified method is suitable for assessing soil loss and sediment accumulation in areas exhibiting simple topography and almost similar slopes along the contour lines. Under these conditions, this method permits faster estimation of soil redistribution rates, providing the possibility of estimating soil redistribution rates over larger areas in a shorter time. In order to optimise the costs and benefits of the methods, the sampling and inventory quantification strategy must be selected according to the resolution of the required information, and the scale and complexity of the landscape relief. Higher tillage- and water-induced erosion rates were observed in the annually ploughed cropland sites than in the semi-permanent grassland sites. Subsistence managed crop and grassland sites also show greater erosion effects than the commercially managed sites. The 137Cs methods used permit discrimination between redistribution rates observed on agricultural land under different land use and management. The 137Cs technique must be seen as an efficient method for estimating medium-term soil redistribution rates, and for planning soil conservation and sustainable agricultural production under the climatic conditions and the soil type of the region of Chile investigated. © 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

Más información

Título según WOS: Use of Cs-137 to estimate tillage- and water-induced soil redistribution rates on agricultural land under different use and management in central-south Chile
Título según SCOPUS: Use of 137Cs to estimate tillage- and water-induced soil redistribution rates on agricultural land under different use and management in central-south Chile
Título de la Revista: SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH
Volumen: 69
Número: 01-feb
Editorial: Elsevier
Fecha de publicación: 2003
Página de inicio: 69
Página final: 83
Idioma: English
URL: http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0167198702001290
DOI:

10.1016/S0167-1987(02)00129-0

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS