The age of vines as a controlling factor of soil erosion processes in Mediterranean vineyards

被引:38
|
作者
Rodrigo-Comino, Jesus [1 ,2 ]
Brevik, Eric C. [3 ]
Cerda, Artemi [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Malaga, Inst Geomorfol & Suelos, Dept Geog, E-29071 Malaga, Spain
[2] Trier Univ, Phys Geog, D-54286 Trier, Germany
[3] Dickinson State Univ, Dept Nat Sci, 291 Campus Dr, Dickinson, ND 58601 USA
[4] Univ Valencia, Dept Geog, Soil Eros & Degradat Res Grp, Valencia 46010, Spain
关键词
Vineyard; Age of plantation; Soil erosion; ISUM; SLOPING VINEYARDS; RAINDROP IMPACT; NUTRIENT LOSSES; RAINFALL INTERCEPTION; SIMULATED RAINFALL; ECOSYSTEM SERVICES; SEDIMENT SOURCES; SURFACE RUNOFF; WATER EROSION; GROUND-COVER;
D O I
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2017.10.204
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Vineyards incur the highest soil and water losses among all Mediterranean agricultural fields. The state-of-the-art shows that soil erosion in vineyards has been primarily surveyed with topographical methods, soil erosion plots and rainfall simulations, but these techniques do not typically assess temporal changes in soil erosion. When vines are planted they are about 30 cm high x 1 cm diameter without leaves, the root system varies from 2 to over 40 cm depth, and sometimes the lack of care used during transplanting can result in a field with highly erodible bare soils. This means that the time since vine plantation plays a key role in soil erosion rates, but very little attention has been paid to this by the scientific community. Thus, the main goal of this research was to estimate soil losses and assess soil erosion processes in two paired vineyard plantations of different ages. To achieve this goal, the improved stock unearthing method (ISUM) was applied to vineyards on colluvial parent materials with similar soil properties, topographical characteristics and land managements in the Les Alcusses Valley, southwestern Valencia province, Spain. Our findings suggested that the old vineyards showed lower erosion rates (- 1.61 Mg ha(-1) yr(-1)) than those that were recently planted (- 8.16 Mg ha(-1) yr(-1)). This is because of the damage that the plantation of the vines causes to soil. Tillage after planting (4 times per year) resulted in changes in the inter-row and row morphology, promoting the development of a ridge underneath the vines that disconnected the inter-rows and reduced soil losses with time. After the second year and until the 25th year after plantation, soil erosion was approximately 1 Mg ha(-1) y(-1), whichmeans thatmost of the erosion took place during the first two years after the plantation. Soil conservation strategies should be applied immediately after the plantation works to allow sustainable grape production. That is when soil erosion most needs to be controlled. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1163 / 1173
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] BAMBOO FOR CONTROLLING SOIL EROSION
    WHITE, DG
    CHILDERS, NF
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF AGRONOMY, 1945, 37 (10): : 839 - 847
  • [22] ASSESSING SOIL PROPERTIES CONTROLLING INTERRILL EROSION: AN EMPIRICAL APPROACH UNDER MEDITERRANEAN CONDITIONS
    Ollobarren Del Barrio, Paul
    Gimenez, Rafael
    Angel Campo-Bescos, Miguel
    LAND DEGRADATION & DEVELOPMENT, 2017, 28 (05) : 1729 - 1741
  • [23] Connectivity assessment in Mediterranean vineyards using improved stock unearthing method, LiDAR and soil erosion field surveys
    Rodrigo Comino, Jesus
    Keesstra, Saskia D.
    Cerda, Artemi
    EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS, 2018, 43 (10) : 2193 - 2206
  • [24] Evaluation of soil erosion risk and identification of soil cover and management factor (C) for RUSLE in European vineyards with different soil management
    Biddoccu, M.
    Guzman, G.
    Capello, G.
    Thielke, T.
    Strauss, P.
    Winter, S.
    Zaller, J. G.
    Nicolai, A.
    Cluzeau, D.
    Popescu, D.
    Bunea, C.
    Hoble, A.
    Cavallo, E.
    Gomez, J. A.
    INTERNATIONAL SOIL AND WATER CONSERVATION RESEARCH, 2020, 8 (04) : 337 - 353
  • [25] Soil Erosion Processes in European Vineyards: A Qualitative Comparison of Rainfall Simulation Measurements in Germany, Spain and France
    Rodrigo Comino, Jesus
    Iserloh, Thomas
    Morvan, Xavier
    Issa, Oumarou Malam
    Naisse, Christophe
    Keesstra, Saskia D.
    Cerda, Artemio
    Prosdocimi, Massimo
    Arnaez, Jose
    Lasanta, Teodoro
    Ramos, Maria Concepcion
    Jose Marques, Maria
    Ruiz Colmenero, Marta
    Bienes, Ramon
    Ruiz Sinoga, Jose Damian
    Seeger, Manuel
    Ries, Johannes B.
    HYDROLOGY, 2016, 3 (01)
  • [26] Factors affecting runoff and erosion under simulated rainfall in Mediterranean vineyards
    Arnaez, J.
    Lasanta, T.
    Ruiz-Flano, P.
    Ortigosa, L.
    SOIL & TILLAGE RESEARCH, 2007, 93 (02): : 324 - 334
  • [27] Observing the soil erosion on sloping vineyards when different soil cover applied
    Cizkova, Alice
    Burg, Patrik
    Masan, Vladimir
    Burgova, Jana
    Visacki, Vladimir
    PROCEEDINGS OF 25TH INTERNATIONAL PHD STUDENTS CONFERENCE (MENDELNET 2018), 2018, : 218 - 223
  • [28] Updated Measurements in Vineyards Improves Accuracy of Soil Erosion Rates
    Rodrigo-Comino, Jesus
    Davis, Jason
    Keesstra, Saskia D.
    Cerda, Artemi
    AGRONOMY JOURNAL, 2018, 110 (01) : 411 - 417
  • [29] Evaluation of the Soil Erosion Risk in Vineyards in La Rioja (Spain)
    Galilea Salvador, Ianire
    RIVAR-REVISTA IBEROAMERICANA DE VITICULTURA AGROINDUSTRIA Y RURALIDAD, 2018, 5 (15): : 197 - 210
  • [30] Effect of plot size and precipitation magnitudes on the activation of soil erosion processes using simulated rainfall experiments in vineyards
    Neumann, Martin
    Kavka, Petr
    Devaty, Jan
    Stasek, Jakub
    Strouhal, Ludek
    Tejkl, Adam
    Kubinova, Romana
    Rodrigo-Comino, Jesus
    FRONTIERS IN ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE, 2022, 10