Geoderma (Oct 2023)

Agricultural activities lead to sediment infilling of wetlandscapes in the Canadian Prairies: Assessment of contributions by tillage, water and wind erosion

  • Ehsan Zarrinabadi,
  • David A. Lobb,
  • Sheng Li,
  • Alexander J. Koiter,
  • Pascal Badiou

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 438
p. 116621

Abstract

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Soil erosion and sediment delivery models have been increasingly employed in studies of catchment sediment dynamics in current years. These models are also used to represent the spatial interaction of soil erosion and sediment transport processes, thereby providing spatially-distributed predictions of soil redistribution rates for agricultural landscapes. It has been widely recognized that individual soil erosion processes and their interactions contribute towards total soil erosion; however, quantifying the rates and patterns of soil erosion processes and their interactions within topographically complex landscapes is challenging. Therefore, the objective of this research was to estimate and model the relative contributions of tillage, water and wind erosion towards total soil erosion in the Canadian Prairie provinces of Manitoba and Alberta using 137Cs, a fallout radionuclide tracer, and three well-established models: (i) Tillage Erosion Model (TillEM); (ii) Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation, version 2 (RUSLE2); and (iii) Single-event Wind Erosion Evaluation Program (SWEEP). The findings indicate that the patterns of 137Cs-estimated soil erosion were closely matched with the erosion pattern predicted by TillEM and suggests that tillage erosion dominates the pattern of total soil erosion on the knolls of hummocky landscapes. Additionally, soil particle size variation within the wetland catchments reflected the modeled patterns of water and tillage erosion. Furthermore, our findings confirmed that colour coefficients are useful in identifying spatial heterogeneity of soil within wetland catchments and reflect the patterns of soil loss and gains. These results indicate that water and tillage erosion, and also their interactions, are main erosion processes in the Canadian Prairie Pothole Region (PPR), but that soil movement by tillage practices has been the predominant redistribution process.

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