Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4372860 Ecological Indicators 2016 15 Pages PDF
Abstract

•We firstly calculated the wind and water erosion moduli in the NIMRYR watershed.•We firstly assessed the wind and water erosion risk in the NIMRYR watershed.•We indicated the NIMRYR watershed is not wind and water erosion crisscross region.

The watershed of the Ningxia-Inner Mongolia Reach of the Yellow River (NIMRYR) suffers from soil erosion by wind and water because of the wide distribution of deserts and arsenic sandstones in this region. The sediment generated by erosion fed into the Yellow River directly or by its tributaries, silting up the Yellow River and raising the elevation of the river bed. The silting of the Yellow River result in serious flood disasters in this watershed. Therefore, it is urgent to implement soil conservation projects to control wind and water soil erosion. To reach this objective, understanding the spatial and temporal variations of soil erosion in this watershed is very important. In this study, an assessment of soil erosion risk by wind and water was performed based on soil erosion models. The Integrated Wind Erosion Modeling System (IWEMS) and the Revised Wind Erosion Equation (RWEQ) were used to estimate the wind erosion modulus in this watershed, and the water erosion modulus was estimated by the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE). The results show that during 2000s, the wind erosion modulus ranged from 0 to 31,440.4 t/km2/a, and the water erosion modulus was from 0 to 24,048.5 t/km2/a. Moreover, the total soil erosion modulus by wind and water has ranged from 0 to 32,792.7 t/km2/a. Due to the influence of regional weather and geomorphology, occurrences of wind and water erosion in this watershed are not identical in their spatial and temporal patterns. Based on the calculated soil erosion modulus, soil erosion risk was assessed according to the “Classification criteria for soil-erosion intensities” (SL190-2007). It was assumed that the areas with erosion intensity higher than slight were at risk of erosion; by this criterion, more than 34% of the total area of the watershed of the NIMRYR would be at erosion risk. Based on this estimation, it was also found that the NIMRYR watershed is not a region of wind–water erosion crisscross and that land-use conversions have a significant impact on soil erosion.

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