E-Book, Englisch, 137 Seiten, eBook
Porto / Fulajtar / Kheng Heng Using 137Cs Resampling Method to Estimate Mean Soil Erosion Rates for Selected Time Windows
1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-3-031-52807-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
E-Book, Englisch, 137 Seiten, eBook
Reihe: Environmental Science and Engineering
ISBN: 978-3-031-52807-1
Verlag: Springer International Publishing
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 1 - PDF Watermark
This book provides guidelines for using a new approach of resampling the Cs-137 radionuclide tracer which is used to estimate soil erosion rates. The Cs-137 resampling approach will improve significantly the use of the Cs-137 method for assessment of soil erosion, because resampling the radionuclide repeatedly (at least two times, but more sampling campaigns are possible) allows to avoid several methodological difficulties associated with Cs-137 method, namely the problems with small-scale spatial heterogeneity, the question of representativeness of reference site, reference samples, and inappropriate time extent of evaluated period. All these methodological problems are very important for reliability and accuracy of erosion rates estimated by Cs-137 method. If using single sampling approach, the small-scale spatial heterogeneity can be overcome by high number of sampling points, but this is time and labour demanding solution increasing the expenses of the erosion research. The representativeness of reference site is evaluated usually on the basis of expert judgement and knowledge of land use history of studied area, but this approach is often uncertain because the expert judgement can be subjective and the data on land use history is often not sufficient. Further, in many areas an appropriate reference site is not available, what limits the territorial extent of using Cs-137 method. The resampling approach offers its second sampling to be done in a proximate vicinity of the same points sampled during the first sampling campaign. A great advantage is the possibility to decide how long time windows should be investigated. Choosing the time schedule of first and second sampling allows to shorten the time window and adjust it to the study objectives. This is a great improvement of the Cs-137 method, because the time period since the Cs-137 fallout is still growing and thus if using the single sampling approach the results refer to still longer and longer time window (since the Cs-137 fallout until the sampling time), and this period (recently ca 60 years assuming the maximum Cs-137 fallout in 1963) is too long to represent stable land use, because land uses are changing over the time and having the same land use over six decades is rather rare. The improvement of Cs-137 method achieved by resampling approach is significantly contributing to understanding the erosion dynamics and estimating its rates under changing environmental conditions (such as land uses, weather), and it will bring a significant benefit to soil conservation programmes, because Cs-137 method is indispensable for assessing the medium and long term soil erosion rates, and this information is among the basic inputs needed for planning and designing soil conservation measures.
Zielgruppe
Research
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Geographical overview of 137Cs resampling studies
2.1 Using 137Cs resampling method in North America and Australia: A review
2.1.1 Contributions from Canada
2.1.2 Contributions from the USA
2.1.3 Contributions from Australia
2.1.4 Discussion and conclusions
2.2 The 137Cs resampling approach in Europe
2.2.1 Contributions from Italy: Using a 137Cs resampling technique to investigate soil erosion and sediment mobilisation in small uncultivated catchments
2.2.2 Comparing soil redistribution estimates using the 137Cs resampling approach in mountain agroecosystems of northern Spain
2.3 Contribution from Africa: Use of 137Cs resampling approach to assess changing soil erosion and deposition rates in Morocco
2.4 Contributions from Asia - Using the 137Cs resampling approach to investigate soil erosion rates in the Loess Plateau, China
2.4.1 Soil redistribution change estimated by 137Cs method responding to land use change
2.4.2 Soil redistribution changes using 137Cs resampling under persisting land use
Chapter 3 Validating Cs-137 re-sampling approach by comparing with conventional erosion plot measurements: An example of cultivated site in Italy
3.1 Introduction
3.2 The study area (Step 1)
3.2.1 The Study site characterization
3.2.2 The conventional measurements of soil loss at experimental plot
3.3 The first and the second sampling campaign for 137Cs measurements (Steps 2 and 3)
3.4 Data analysis and evaluation (Step 4)
3.4.1 The radiometric analyses
3.4.2 The 137Cs inventories from the sectioned cores
3.4.3 The 137Cs reference inventories in the study area. Earlier values or new sampling?
3.5 Problems due to the different locations of the samples collected during the two sampling campaigns and the effects of spatial micro-variability (Step 5)
3.6 Selection of the conversion model to convert the 137Cs data into soil erosion rates (Step 6)
3.7 Results of conventional measurements of soil erosion rates at the experimental plot
3.8 Comparing erosion rates obtained by conventional measurements at erosion plots and by the 137Cs resampling technique – A validation exercise (Step 7)
3.8.1 Spatial reference approach
3.8.2 Traditional reference approach
3.9 Conclusions
Chapter 4 A step-by-step protocol to apply the 137Cs resampling approach to assess soil erosion during chosen time periods
4.1. Protocol for application of 137Cs resampling method
4.2 Possible study objectives, opportunities, and advantages of using 137Cs resampling technique




