Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data

Soil erosion is a serious threat of increasing dimensions and tends to blunt efforts to counter global population growth with increased and sustainable agricultural production. Especially the tropics are vulnerable because of the circumstantial convergence of intense climatic regimes, frequently fra...

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Autores principales: Claessens, Lieven, Breugel, P. van, Notenbaert, An Maria Omer, Herrero, Mario, Steeg, Jeannette van de
Formato: Conference Paper
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Association of Hydrological Sciences 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1825
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author Claessens, Lieven
Breugel, P. van
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Herrero, Mario
Steeg, Jeannette van de
author_browse Breugel, P. van
Claessens, Lieven
Herrero, Mario
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Steeg, Jeannette van de
author_facet Claessens, Lieven
Breugel, P. van
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Herrero, Mario
Steeg, Jeannette van de
author_sort Claessens, Lieven
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Soil erosion is a serious threat of increasing dimensions and tends to blunt efforts to counter global population growth with increased and sustainable agricultural production. Especially the tropics are vulnerable because of the circumstantial convergence of intense climatic regimes, frequently fragile soils, low levels of fertilizer use and conservation practices and strong dependence on soil quality for livelihoods. In addition, climate change is expected to aggravate the already existing vulnerabilities of the poorest people who depend on semi-subsistence agriculture for their survival. Tools for assessing spatially explicit erosion patterns would be a great help for planning soil conservation measures or targeting agricultural technology or policy interventions that mitigate the adverse effects of soil erosion and could help farmers to adapt. Because extensive measurement of soil erosion is expensive and time consuming, erosion models that make use of secondary data available in a Geographic Information System can offer a useful alternative. In this paper, an attempt is made to analyze and map current soil erosion potential on the sub-continental scale. We use principles of the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) and its reformulations to make a qualitative assessment of soil erosion in East Africa. Data on climate, soils, topography, hydrology and land cover are derived from existing secondary data sources that are spatially explicit and have an adequate resolution to be linked, at least as proxies, to important drivers of soil erosion as represented in the USLE. Obvious limitations of methodology and data, as well as the lack of validation possibilities are discussed. The results have value in reflecting broad patterns of soil erosion across East Africa. The methodology also permits to highlight hotspots of soil erosion risk where agricultural research can focus efforts of developing or applying soil conservation measures and target agricultural technology and policy interventions that can mitigate the adverse effects of soil erosion on poor people’s livelihoods.
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spelling CGSpace18252024-01-22T09:44:16Z Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data Claessens, Lieven Breugel, P. van Notenbaert, An Maria Omer Herrero, Mario Steeg, Jeannette van de erosion erosion control Soil erosion is a serious threat of increasing dimensions and tends to blunt efforts to counter global population growth with increased and sustainable agricultural production. Especially the tropics are vulnerable because of the circumstantial convergence of intense climatic regimes, frequently fragile soils, low levels of fertilizer use and conservation practices and strong dependence on soil quality for livelihoods. In addition, climate change is expected to aggravate the already existing vulnerabilities of the poorest people who depend on semi-subsistence agriculture for their survival. Tools for assessing spatially explicit erosion patterns would be a great help for planning soil conservation measures or targeting agricultural technology or policy interventions that mitigate the adverse effects of soil erosion and could help farmers to adapt. Because extensive measurement of soil erosion is expensive and time consuming, erosion models that make use of secondary data available in a Geographic Information System can offer a useful alternative. In this paper, an attempt is made to analyze and map current soil erosion potential on the sub-continental scale. We use principles of the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) and its reformulations to make a qualitative assessment of soil erosion in East Africa. Data on climate, soils, topography, hydrology and land cover are derived from existing secondary data sources that are spatially explicit and have an adequate resolution to be linked, at least as proxies, to important drivers of soil erosion as represented in the USLE. Obvious limitations of methodology and data, as well as the lack of validation possibilities are discussed. The results have value in reflecting broad patterns of soil erosion across East Africa. The methodology also permits to highlight hotspots of soil erosion risk where agricultural research can focus efforts of developing or applying soil conservation measures and target agricultural technology and policy interventions that can mitigate the adverse effects of soil erosion on poor people’s livelihoods. 2008-12-01 2010-06-08T17:03:08Z 2010-06-08T17:03:08Z Conference Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1825 en Limited Access International Association of Hydrological Sciences Claessens, L.; Breugel, P. van; Notenbaert, A.; Herrero, M.; Steeg, J. van de. 2008. Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data. IN: Sediment Dynamics in Changing Environments. Proceedings of a symposium held in Christchurch, New Zealand, 1-5 December 2008. IAHS Publication 325. Christchurch (New Zealand): International Association of Hydrological Sciences: 398-407
spellingShingle erosion
erosion control
Claessens, Lieven
Breugel, P. van
Notenbaert, An Maria Omer
Herrero, Mario
Steeg, Jeannette van de
Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title_full Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title_fullStr Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title_full_unstemmed Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title_short Mapping potential soil erosion in East Africa using the Universal Soil Loss Equation and secondary data
title_sort mapping potential soil erosion in east africa using the universal soil loss equation and secondary data
topic erosion
erosion control
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/1825
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