As agricultural land area increases to feed an expanding global population, soil erosion will likely accelerate, generating unsustainable losses of soil and nutrients. This is critical for Kenya where cropland expansion and nutrient loading from runoff and erosion is contributing to eutrophication of freshwater ecosystems and desertification. We used the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) to predict soil erosion rates under present land cover and potential natural vegetation nationally across Kenya. Simulating natural vegetation conditions allows the degree to which erosion rates are elevated under current land use practices to be determined. This methodology exploits new digital soil maps and two vegetation cover maps to model topsoil (top 20 cm) erosion rates, lifespans (the mass of topsoil divided by erosion rate), and lateral nutrient fluxes (nutrient concentration times erosion rate) under both scenarios. We estimated the mean soil erosion rate under current land cover at similar to 5.5 t ha(-1) yr(-1), similar to 3 times the rate estimated for natural vegetation cover (similar to 1.8 t ha(-1) yr(-1)), and equivalent to similar to 320 Mt yr(-1) of topsoil lost nationwide. Under present erosion rates, similar to 8.8 Mt, similar to 315 Kt, and similar to 110 Kt of soil organic carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous are lost from soil every year, respectively. Further, 5.3 % of topsoils (similar to 3.1 Mha), including at >25 % of croplands, have short lifespans (<100 years). Additional scenarios were tested that assume combinations of terracing and reduced tillage practices were adopted on croplands to mitigate erosion. Establishing bench terraces with zoned tillage could reduce soil losses by >= 75 %; up to 87.1 t ha(-1) yr(-1). These reductions are comparable to converting croplands to natural vegetation, demonstrating most agricultural soils can be conserved successfully. Extensive long-term monitoring of croplands with terraces and reduced tillage established is required to verify the efficacy of these agricultural support practices as indicated by our modelling.
Feeney, C.J., Robinson, D.A., Thomas, A.R.C., Borrelli, P., Cooper, D.M., May, L. (2023). Agricultural practices drive elevated rates of topsoil decline across Kenya, but terracing and reduced tillage can reverse this. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 870 [10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.161925].
Agricultural practices drive elevated rates of topsoil decline across Kenya, but terracing and reduced tillage can reverse this
Robinson D. A.;Borrelli P.;
2023-01-01
Abstract
As agricultural land area increases to feed an expanding global population, soil erosion will likely accelerate, generating unsustainable losses of soil and nutrients. This is critical for Kenya where cropland expansion and nutrient loading from runoff and erosion is contributing to eutrophication of freshwater ecosystems and desertification. We used the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) to predict soil erosion rates under present land cover and potential natural vegetation nationally across Kenya. Simulating natural vegetation conditions allows the degree to which erosion rates are elevated under current land use practices to be determined. This methodology exploits new digital soil maps and two vegetation cover maps to model topsoil (top 20 cm) erosion rates, lifespans (the mass of topsoil divided by erosion rate), and lateral nutrient fluxes (nutrient concentration times erosion rate) under both scenarios. We estimated the mean soil erosion rate under current land cover at similar to 5.5 t ha(-1) yr(-1), similar to 3 times the rate estimated for natural vegetation cover (similar to 1.8 t ha(-1) yr(-1)), and equivalent to similar to 320 Mt yr(-1) of topsoil lost nationwide. Under present erosion rates, similar to 8.8 Mt, similar to 315 Kt, and similar to 110 Kt of soil organic carbon, nitrogen and phosphorous are lost from soil every year, respectively. Further, 5.3 % of topsoils (similar to 3.1 Mha), including at >25 % of croplands, have short lifespans (<100 years). Additional scenarios were tested that assume combinations of terracing and reduced tillage practices were adopted on croplands to mitigate erosion. Establishing bench terraces with zoned tillage could reduce soil losses by >= 75 %; up to 87.1 t ha(-1) yr(-1). These reductions are comparable to converting croplands to natural vegetation, demonstrating most agricultural soils can be conserved successfully. Extensive long-term monitoring of croplands with terraces and reduced tillage established is required to verify the efficacy of these agricultural support practices as indicated by our modelling.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.