Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos

In Montane Southeast Asia, deforestation and unsuitable combinations of crops and agricultural practices degrade soils at an unprecedented rate. Typically, smallholder farmers gain income from “available” land by replacing fallow or secondary forest by perennial crops. We aimed to understand how the...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lacombe, Guillaume, Valentin, Christian, Sounyafong, P., Rouw, Anneke de, Soulileuth, B., Silvera, N., Pierret, A., Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth, Ribolzi, Olivier
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91316
_version_ 1855527547632091136
author Lacombe, Guillaume
Valentin, Christian
Sounyafong, P.
Rouw, Anneke de
Soulileuth, B.
Silvera, N.
Pierret, A.
Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth
Ribolzi, Olivier
author_browse Lacombe, Guillaume
Pierret, A.
Ribolzi, Olivier
Rouw, Anneke de
Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth
Silvera, N.
Soulileuth, B.
Sounyafong, P.
Valentin, Christian
author_facet Lacombe, Guillaume
Valentin, Christian
Sounyafong, P.
Rouw, Anneke de
Soulileuth, B.
Silvera, N.
Pierret, A.
Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth
Ribolzi, Olivier
author_sort Lacombe, Guillaume
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description In Montane Southeast Asia, deforestation and unsuitable combinations of crops and agricultural practices degrade soils at an unprecedented rate. Typically, smallholder farmers gain income from “available” land by replacing fallow or secondary forest by perennial crops. We aimed to understand how these practices increase or reduce soil erosion. Ten land uses were monitored in Northern Laos during the 2015 monsoon, using local farmers' fields. Experiments included plots of the conventional system (food crops and fallow), and land uses corresponding to new market opportunities (e.g. commercial tree plantations). Land uses were characterized by measuring plant cover and plant mean height per vegetation layer. Recorded meteorological variables included rainfall intensity, throughfall amount, throughfall kinetic energy (TKE), and raindrop size. Runoff coefficient, soil loss, and the percentage areas of soil surface types (free aggregates and gravel; crusts; macro-faunal, vegetal and pedestal features; plant litter) were derived from observations and measurements in 1-m2 micro-plots. Relationships between these variables were explored with multiple regression analyses. Our results indicate that TKE induces soil crusting and soil loss. By reducing rainfall infiltration, crusted area enhances runoff, which removes and transports soil particles detached by splash over non-crusted areas. TKE is lower under land uses reducing the velocity of raindrops and/or preventing an increase in their size. Optimal vegetation structures combine minimum height of the lowest layer (to reduce drop velocity at ground level) and maximum coverage (to intercept the largest amount of rainfall), as exemplified by broom grass (Thysanolaena latifolia). In contrast, high canopies with large leaves will increase TKE by enlarging raindrops, as exemplified by teak trees (Tectona grandis), unless a protective understorey exists under the trees. Policies that ban the burning of multi-layered vegetation structure under tree plantations should be enforced. Shade-tolerant shrubs and grasses with potential economic return could be promoted as understorey.
format Journal Article
id CGSpace91316
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2018
publishDateRange 2018
publishDateSort 2018
publisher Elsevier
publisherStr Elsevier
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace913162025-03-11T09:50:20Z Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos Lacombe, Guillaume Valentin, Christian Sounyafong, P. Rouw, Anneke de Soulileuth, B. Silvera, N. Pierret, A. Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth Ribolzi, Olivier crops soil surface properties erosion runoff sloping land food security plantations vegetation rain infiltration catchment areas land usecrops land use sediment concentrating In Montane Southeast Asia, deforestation and unsuitable combinations of crops and agricultural practices degrade soils at an unprecedented rate. Typically, smallholder farmers gain income from “available” land by replacing fallow or secondary forest by perennial crops. We aimed to understand how these practices increase or reduce soil erosion. Ten land uses were monitored in Northern Laos during the 2015 monsoon, using local farmers' fields. Experiments included plots of the conventional system (food crops and fallow), and land uses corresponding to new market opportunities (e.g. commercial tree plantations). Land uses were characterized by measuring plant cover and plant mean height per vegetation layer. Recorded meteorological variables included rainfall intensity, throughfall amount, throughfall kinetic energy (TKE), and raindrop size. Runoff coefficient, soil loss, and the percentage areas of soil surface types (free aggregates and gravel; crusts; macro-faunal, vegetal and pedestal features; plant litter) were derived from observations and measurements in 1-m2 micro-plots. Relationships between these variables were explored with multiple regression analyses. Our results indicate that TKE induces soil crusting and soil loss. By reducing rainfall infiltration, crusted area enhances runoff, which removes and transports soil particles detached by splash over non-crusted areas. TKE is lower under land uses reducing the velocity of raindrops and/or preventing an increase in their size. Optimal vegetation structures combine minimum height of the lowest layer (to reduce drop velocity at ground level) and maximum coverage (to intercept the largest amount of rainfall), as exemplified by broom grass (Thysanolaena latifolia). In contrast, high canopies with large leaves will increase TKE by enlarging raindrops, as exemplified by teak trees (Tectona grandis), unless a protective understorey exists under the trees. Policies that ban the burning of multi-layered vegetation structure under tree plantations should be enforced. Shade-tolerant shrubs and grasses with potential economic return could be promoted as understorey. 2018-03 2018-03-07T10:16:35Z 2018-03-07T10:16:35Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91316 en Open Access Elsevier Lacombe, Guillaume; Valentin, C.; Sounyafong, P.; de Rouw, A.; Soulileuth, B.; Silvera, N.; Pierret, A.; Sengtaheuanghoung, O.; Ribolzi, O. 2017. Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos. Science of the Total Environment. 18p. (Online first). . 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.185
spellingShingle crops
soil surface properties
erosion
runoff
sloping land
food security
plantations
vegetation
rain
infiltration
catchment areas
land usecrops
land use
sediment
concentrating
Lacombe, Guillaume
Valentin, Christian
Sounyafong, P.
Rouw, Anneke de
Soulileuth, B.
Silvera, N.
Pierret, A.
Sengtaheuanghoung, Oloth
Ribolzi, Olivier
Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title_full Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title_fullStr Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title_full_unstemmed Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title_short Linking crop structure, throughfall, soil surface conditions, runoff and soil detachment: 10 land uses analyzed in northern Laos
title_sort linking crop structure throughfall soil surface conditions runoff and soil detachment 10 land uses analyzed in northern laos
topic crops
soil surface properties
erosion
runoff
sloping land
food security
plantations
vegetation
rain
infiltration
catchment areas
land usecrops
land use
sediment
concentrating
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/91316
work_keys_str_mv AT lacombeguillaume linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT valentinchristian linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT sounyafongp linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT rouwannekede linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT soulileuthb linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT silveran linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT pierreta linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT sengtaheuanghoungoloth linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos
AT ribolziolivier linkingcropstructurethroughfallsoilsurfaceconditionsrunoffandsoildetachment10landusesanalyzedinnorthernlaos