Abstract

Erosion and sediment transport processes are strongly dependent on the spatial scale and land use. The objective of this study is to analyse the effects of slash and burn of vegetation followed by grass cultivation for grazing, on the hydrological and sedimentological behaviour at different spatial scales in a semiarid region in Brazil. Rainfall, runoff and soil loss were measured during three years (total of 116 rainfall-runoff events) at three spatial scales: 1 m² and 20 m² plots and 2.8 ha watershed. During the first year (2009) the native dry tropical forest/Caatinga vegetation was maintained, whereas on the following years (2010 and 2011) the original vegetation was cleared using slash and burn techniques to grow pasture (Andropogon gayanus Kunt). Annual runoff coefficient is highest at the 20 m² plot among the investigated scales. Runoff presented the same trend in all years. Sediment yield was strongly influenced by the land cover. Slash, burn and pasture cultivation strongly impacted sediment yield: the first two events after the land cover change yielded roughly ten times more sediment than similar events in the years with native cover and after grass development. The change was most noticeable at the catchment scale due to erosion along the stream, redefining the drainage network.

Details

Title
Land use impact on soil erosion at different scales in the Brazilian semi-arid
Author
dos Santos, Julio CesarNeves; de Andrade, Eunice Maia; Medeiros, Pedro HenriqueAugusto; Guerreiro, Maria JoãoSimas; Palácio, Helba Araújode Queiroz
Pages
251-260
Section
Agricultural Engineering
Publication year
2017
Publication date
2017
Publisher
Universidade Federal do Ceará, Centro de Ciências Agrárias
ISSN
00456888
e-ISSN
18066690
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
Portuguese
ProQuest document ID
1863213851
Copyright
Copyright Universidade Federal do Ceará, Centro de Ciências Agrárias 2017