by Dr J Floor Anthoni (2000)
www.seafriends.org.nz/enviro/soil/erosion.htm
Rain has been recognised as one of the most
influential factors on soil erosion as it transports soil away, visible
by rivers becoming streams of mud. But the damage caused by rain drops
hitting the soil, has been recognised only recently. When soils dry out,
wind can transport soil particles as dust storms. Also frost can be damaging
to soils.
Ironically, the most damaging of rainfall is the impact with which
water droplets hit the soil. From there on, the flow of water causes sheet-wash,
rilling, surface gullying, tunnelling and in rivers it scours banks.
Rain Rain is undoubtedly the largest cause of erosion. Water is about 800
times heavier than air, half to one third the weight of rock and about
equal in weight to loose topsoil. When it flows, it can move loose substances
with ease. Surprisingly, rain's most damaging moment is when a water drop
hits the ground.
This
diagram shows the effect of raindrop impact. Only recently its unexpected
destructive power has been discovered. Previously it was thought that sheetwash,
the flow of water over the soil, was the most destructive. The kinetic
energy of a moving object is equal to half its mass multiplied by its speed
squared:
e=mv2/2. As water droplets grow in size, both
their speed and mass increase. The mass of a 5 mm raindrop is 5x5x5=125
times that of a 1 mm drop and its 'terminal' speed doubles, resulting in
a destructive energy 500 times larger! Thus the destructive power of rain
increases dramatically as the rainstorm produces larger drops, which is
relatively rare. But when it occurs, its effect is profoundly destructive.
In the past ten years, starting around 1987, rains have become heavier
everywhere in the world, and with it, erosion from raindrop impact.
To fight this kind of erosion, it is only necessary to keep the soil
covered, either by dense foliage or by a ground mulch. Hence the importance
of growing a cover crop under horticulture (fruits, wine), keeping the
soil covered after harvesting (stubble on the field), and not overgrazing
pastures. On building sites, a mulch should be spread or a plastic cover,
or a temporary grass cover. Road sides should at all times be vegetated
and not mowed to show the dirt. Fertilisation helps to make foliage denser
and to produce more leaf litter. Everyone could play a role here.
As
rain drops hit the soil, they loosen its structure, freeing up fine clay
particles, which do not settle down easily, and which are transported down-hill
in the sheetwash. The diagram on right shows how this happens [1]. It is
a very important diagram, since it shows how particles are transported,
and it applies to wind, dunes, beaches, coasts, rivers and estuaries. It
has to do with the friction a particle experiences when moving through
a medium (water, air). The scientist Stokes formulated this mathematically,
and it is shown in the three red curves. The left one gives the speed at
which particles settle out; the rightmost one the speed to erode cohesive
material; the middle one to erode loose material.
Horizontally: the water speed from 0.01cm/s to 1000cm/s (36 km/hr or
20 knots). Vertically the grain size from 1 micron (clay) to 10mm (pebbles).
The coloured bands show where clay becomes silt, then sand, then granules,
and pebbles.
Look at pebbles first (top grey band) and assume they form a loose river
bed. Nothing happens till the speed exceeds 20cm/s. Even then the pebbles
won't move. It needs a water speed of close to 100cm/s (2 knot) to start
moving the bed. Once pebbles are on the move, they won't settle out
until the speed has decreased below 20cm/s. This transportation gap between
erosion and sedimentation, widens as the particles become smaller. Thus
silt and clay particles reluctantly settle out. It takes clay weeks in
fresh water.
The right-hand curve shows how cohesive material erodes. Sand and gravel
do not pack very well and even cohesive sand or pebbles, are easily eroded.
But the situation changes for silt and clay. Once packed, they need as
much water velocity as a packed bed of pebbles! It explains how easily
clay can suffocate water organisms and how a packed cake of clay stays
put for years. (For instance, the 7 cm clay bed deposited in 15m deep water
by cyclone Bola, took 7 years to disappear.) It also explains how rain
drops (see previous subchapter) have practically no effect, until their
energy becomes sufficient to erode the packed silt and clay. It is a very
sudden transition, explaining why soil erosion happens only rarely, but
when it happens, it does so in grand style. Another steep effect is that
water, laden with soil, becomes up to twice as heavy, exerting more pressure
and scouring more readily. It is as if all three red curves are moved to
the left by a factor of two. Being heavier, water also flows more rapidly
down-hill, causing even more destruction. Its erosive energy mv2
can increase up to 8 times! In addition, both its pressure and friction
increase, making it even more effective at scouring river banks.
Using this knowledge, one can understand that particles settle out in
different places, as a river slows down in its lower reaches. Follow the
leftmost curve: first the pebbles; further down clean sand and perhaps
near the sea the silt. But the clay travels all the way to the sea. Here
something else happens.
A
simple but very important experiment has shown that in salt water fine
particles and organic matter settle out considerably faster than in fresh
water (4-200 times, depending on particle size). It is thought that the
salt water encourages particles to join together, thus making them larger
and sinking faster, but this goes against Bernouilli's law and the sedimentation/transport
diagram above. [2]
Reader please note, that no scientific work has been done
to explain this phenomenon. Water is an excellent solvent for charged particles
due to its polarity and charged ions OH- and H+. Salt consisting of Na+
and Cl- may neutralise much of water's capacity to dissolve substances.
Note that soap won't lather well in salt water, presumably for the same
reason.
Its effect is that fine silt and clay settle out, as soon as they reach
salt water, which happens in coastal estuaries. Organic matter does the
same, enriching mud flats and mangroves.
This effect may also explain why mud from rivers is so detrimental
to the coastal marine environment. Clay settles out very quickly, forming
crusts on top of everything, suffocating organisms, while being difficult
to remove.
Water causes the following types of erosion:
raindrop: rain drops hit bare soil and detach it. Fine particles
stay suspended and wash down-hill. The clay portion of the soil, which
binds nutrients, is lost and with it the nutrients as well. Modest rains
cause dirty rivers, affecting water creatures. Remedy: keep the soil covered
by foliage, stubble and mulch on cropland, mulch on bare building sites,
trees over grassland.
sheetwash: water moves over the ground, detaching fine particles.
Remedy as above.
rilling: a problem which is typical of worked and ploughed soil.
Water forms small gutters (rills) that transport much soil. Once water
starts to form rills, erosion is very high and soil particles are moved
off the field entirely. As water moves down hill, it meets up with more
water, running ever stronger and gouging ever deeper and transporting ever
more soil. The remedies are found in conservation tilling and contouring.
As cropland ages, it becomes more sensitive to compaction and waterlogging,
resulting in more runoff, which causes this problem.
gullying: water moves through creeks, widening and deepening these
into gullies, baring the rock and transporting ever more soil to the sea.
When attempting to protect water courses, one must keep in mind that obstructed
water causes flooding. So gullies in steep terrain require the water to
be slowed down. Where rivers flow slowly, no obstacles must be placed in
their way, like trees on river banks. Gullies can be filled with logs and
planted with vegetation like lilies, and check dams can be erected across
gullies.
This
diagram shows the various remedies to combat erosion on grassland and hilly
terrain. From left to right:
riparian fencing: by fencing waterways, cattle won't trample river
banks and natural vegetation can regrow. Also tree planting on river sides
helps. Make sure the flat land is not part of the river's flood zone.
shelter belts: shelter belts provide roots at the boundaries of
the field, sheltering the soil, supplying organic matter.
grassed waterways: a very effective protection of shallow water
ways is to grass them over. Grass leaves bend over in the current, protecting
the soil. Note that grass needs sunlight, so shelter belts must be placed
on the correct side. Make grassed waterways wide and shallow to slow the
water down and to prevent it from rilling and then gullying the waterway.
Avoid spraying and mow regularly. Avoid length-wise tyre tracks.
spaced tree planting: trees provide deep roots that hold the soil;
cycle deep nutrients and lost nutrients, provide organic matter and more.
Trees must compete with highly metabolising grassland, thus should be fast
growing and deciduous.
debris dams: debris dams check the water in steep gullies. They
should not be used in slow-flowing waterways. Any kind of debris would
do but natural products such as tree stumps, branches, plantings are better.
retirement fencing: problem areas should be fenced for retirement
so that seedlings are no longer grazed. Fencing is an absolute must to
encourage natural growth and to protect tree plantings.
close tree planting: on retired land, trees can be planted closely.
Once retired, any kind of tree can be planted, as necessary for forestry
or for slow growing native bush.
topdressing: fertilising is the best remedy against erosion, both
immediately and in the long term.
The riparian fence in this picture was not placed to protect
a river bank but to protect a stand of mangrove trees in northern New Zealand.
As can be seen, these plants disappeared where cattle grazed.
A four-wheel drive truck topdressing pasture in New Zealand.
This farm is accessible by four-wheel drive vehicle, but even then, a suitable
day must be picked, with little wind and the soil dry enough. Steeper farms
are topdressed by plane.
Remedies
for saving cropland are, from left to right:
shelter belts: reduce wind and evaporation, increase soil temperature.
reduced tillage: tilling only the areas that matter while minimally
disturbing the soil. Tilling between furrows.
no-tillage: the ultimate in reduced tillage. Weeds are controlled
by cutting or with herbicides. The natural soil organisms are allowed to
rebuild the soil, increasing its porosity and resistance to compaction,
while better retaining nutrients. Only where seeds are planted is the soil
'drilled'.
stubble-mulching: leaving stubble on the field as long as possible
to reduce evaporation, to catch snow in winter, to keep the soil covered.
Rather than ploughing the stubble under, which would disturb the soil while
inviting soil organisms to decompose the organic matter far too rapidly,
the stubble is mulched to leave soil organisms the task of digging it under.
This reduces weed growth and keeps the soil covered, while feeding the
soil biota slowly.
contour ploughing: works a bit like terracing, preventing moisture
from running down-hill and reducing erosion considerably.
strip cropping: reduces the downslope length of the field considerably,
reducing the chance of rilling. Increases biodiverity. Leached nutrients
are used by neighbouring strips. Shelters bare strips from wind and wind
erosion. Makes better use of the land but is more labour intensive.
terracing: the ultimate in soil conservation on steeper hills. It
is extensively practised in padiculture where water is harvested at the
same time. Terracing is common in viticulture (wine). Terracing can reduce
erosion twenty-fold.
reduced compaction: using machinery and technology that spreads
its weight over a larger area. Reduced tilling causes soils that resist
compaction better.
optimal fertilising: although fertiliser is an important ingredient
for increasing profit and yield, it can also degrade the land in many ways.
Regular soil tests are one way of overcoming this. Erring on the safe side,
another.
water harvesting: by keeping forests planted above the field, one
prevents runoff from reaching the cropland. Trees also harvest water in
their very porous soils. Water is slowly released into the water table,
reaching the cropland down-slope. Ponds can be made by damming the upper
catchment area of a creek. Water will flow through the water table to water
cropland down-slope. Water can be used for irrigation and stock drinking
water.
Conservation tillage has shown its superiority
beyond doubt, giving the advantages of increased profit, fuel savings,
fewer trips more erosion control, conservation of moisture, reduction of
compaction, reduced pest control and ease of management.
Those resisting the method, mention the following reasons: increased
effort in weed control, lack of finance to make the switch, inadequate
equipment, loss of profit, increased insect and disease control and more
clumsy fertiliser management.
A cropland near Bombay, New Zealand, is not being ploughed
along height contours, inviting disaster. Farmers often plough this way
to prevent waterlogging; water trapped between furrows. The methods used
also leave far too much soil bare.
Not far from the place on left, this cropland was severely
damaged by rain. It was courting disaster by not contour-ploughing, and
allowing such a long water course (field length down-hill). Estimated loss:
10% of the top soil in one rain storm! Notice how rilling starts already
high up the field.
Fields take on bizarre patterns when ploughed along height
contours. But it reduces erosion considerably. The picture shows how the
land is cropped in strips, each with its own crop and seasonal timing.
In the humid tropics, padi culture has proved its sustainability.
The terraces contour the land, forming perfectly horizontal cropland, which
harvests its own water. Padis make their own nitrogen fertiliser with the
help of Azolla ferns.
An example of erosion rilling in loose topsoil on a highway
bank. Note how the young grass roots were insufficient to stop it, neither
was the cover of hay that preceded sowing. See the chapter on roading and
roadside management.
This farmer attempts to control erosion with the help of
thousands of old car tyres; in the gully to prevent gully scouring and
also on the sandy slopes. Rather than introducing an element of pollution,
it would be much better to fight erosion by natural means. Besides, trees
would have achieved much more. But the point here is that these hills should
never have been grazed in the first place, and retirement is now the best
remedy.
Read also how runoff results from the difference between rainfall and
evaporation in geology/evaporation,
and how narrow the margins are for sustainable farming.
References
[1] Heezen & Hollister (1964) in Turekian, Karl K
(1968): Oceans. Prentice-Hall, p25
[2] Williams, B L & Rutherford, J C (1983): The
flushing of pollutants and nutrients from the Upper Waitemata Harbour.
ARA Specialist Report for NWASCO. Ministry of Works and Development Water
Quality Centre Report No.1 88pp and Appendices.
Frost When water freezes, it expands suddenly and with tremendous force.
When water inside a crack in a rock freezes, its expansive strength may
be sufficient to crack the rock and to break parts off it. Frost is tremendously
active in snow-covered mountains, particularly along the snow boundary
where water repeatedly thaws and freezes. It causes steep cliffs in this
region.
A particularly mysterious form of frost damage is frost heave, resulting
in damaged roads, buildings and cropland. It appears as if the frost heaved
sections of the land upward, by as much as 20cm and usually in very irregular
ways. As can be expected, frost heave works with the strength of frost.
Frost heave is not predictable but happens after a deep frost period,
followed by thawing and freezing again, and a few repeats of this sequence.
In permafrost soils of the arctic, it causes engineering headaches that
have to be met with special solutions.
Frost heave can be understood as follows: a deep frost, or permafrost
freezes the soil to a certain depth. When this frost thaws incompletely,
it leaves a frozen layer behind. Underneath it, the soil may still be thawed
but in permafrost places, this frozen bottom is always present. Above it,
melting water collects. A repeated frost now freezes it again from the
top down, forming a hard layer on top with water in between the two frozen
layers. As the frost progresses deeper, the entire top layer is pushed
up a few centimetres. The next thawing/freezing cycle repeats this, ratcheting
the top layer higher and higher, and always with the same force. Only when
the deepest layer is thawed again, will frost heaving stop.
It is not known how much erosion is caused by frost heaving, but it
can damage soil structure.
Wind Memories
don't last forever. They disappear when one dies, reason why people are
doomed to repeat the mistakes of their grandparents (3 generations = about
90 years). How many people today would remember the days of the dust bowl?
This famous photograph in all its sadness, reminds us of an event in the
history of agriculture in America, that is remembered for its unavoidability
and its sadness. A farmer and his two sons are seeking shelter from the
arriving dust storm. A derelict shed speaks of extreme hardship. Nothing
on their land is like it was only a few years before.
It happened when a period with prosperity and adequate rainfall, was
followed by an unexpected one of continuous droughts. The farming practices
which were once appropriate, suddenly became disastrous. With their lands
bared, farmers were caught out by the drought, unable to do anything meaningful.
The winds did the rest. Sadness followed.
Just
like moving water being able to move soil, moving air can do so too. In
fact in the same way as the curves of the erosion/sedimentation diagram
above (soil51.gif). Fine particles are moved easily
(but not when wet) and when they are as small as clay and silt, they become
airborne, reluctant to settle out again, even though air is 800 times lighter
than water. Sand particles between 0.1 and 1 mm move by saltating (jumping)
over the ground, like a sheet. Heavier particles move by rolling.
Unlike water, wind can move soil over very large distances of thousands
of kilometres and over sea to other countries. It can move soil up-hill.
Of course, the finest clay particles are transported furthest. The amount
of soil moved, must not be underestimated, and once in motion, and the
air heavy with dust, its erosive power increases. At least rain runs in
gullies, but the wind blows everywhere. In many countries, usually those
with arid climates, erosion from wind is considered by far the worst.
Damage is caused in various ways:
loss of fine soil: fine soil is transported furthest away. The fine
clay particles bind nutrients and are crucial to fertility.
loss of crops: crops are lost because they are being dug out, sand-blasted
and covered in soil.
damage to soil: the composition of the soil changes; the land is
furrowed in rills and gullies, leaving infertile rock behind.
damage to buildings and infrastructure: roads are dug out and sand
deposited over houses, fences and so on. The farm becomes unrecognisable.
To
avoid wind-blown erosion, arid soils should not be worked, but in order
to survive, people do. The remains of the previous crop (stubble, stalks,
straw) should not be removed until just prior to planting. Strip cropping
shelters the land and so do shelterbelts. Reduced tillage or no-tillage
is preferable. Once the soil has been swept into land dunes (as opposed
to sea dunes), these should be planted and stabilised. Fertiliser is an
important weapon in doing so.
(The photo shows the linear dunes of the Sahara Desert
encroaching on Nouakchott, the capital of Mauritania. Note how massive
and unstoppable sand blowing can be. Photo by Georg Gerster, courtesy U.S.
Geological Survey)
In heavy wind, the sand is
seen saltating away from the photographer, as a fast moving sheet, weaving
ripples as it goes. The darker sand, which contains heavier particles and
magnetite, stays put underneath, as the light-coloured sand moves swiftly
over it.
This satellite image captured smoke and dust blowing from
northern Africa over the Mediterranean Sea. The white plumes are smoke,
the brown plumes on left are dust. Burning is still a common practice,
particularly in arid areas. It is done to prepare soil for planting, but
precious nutrients and soil organic matter are lost as they go up in smoke.