کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4571712 | 1629246 | 2013 | 10 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |
Soil and vegetation are interacting factors controlling erosion. Soil degradation processes may affect the normal tree and shrub development and inversely, vegetation can modulate the velocity and intensity of soil development or denudation. A dendrogeomorphological approach can be used to study these interactions, allowing to obtain a date and estimate mean or specific erosion rates. This is especially useful in an unrecorded badlands and gullied environments, where the scarce vegetation may be the only proxy available to quantify the different geomorphic processes which have occurred. This paper provides a fundamental review of the dendrogeomorphological methodology applied to erosion measurement in badlands. Focusing on the response of the vegetation to the geomorphic processes, this paper: (a) describes the methodology developed to estimate erosion rates with exposed roots; (b) shows new advances through case studies; and finally, (c) discusses future lines of research to reduce methodological uncertainties and for making dendrogeomorphology more widely applicable.
► The gully erosion often allows exposure of roots.
► Vegetation responds to geomorphic processes such as gully erosion.
► This response observed in the tree rings allows to quantify the erosion process.
► We present a methodological review, case studies and prospects for future studies of dendrogeomorphology applied to gully erosion.
Journal: CATENA - Volume 106, July 2013, Pages 113–122