Watershed management technique to control sediment yield in agriculturally dominated areas

被引:13
|
作者
Nicklow, JW [1 ]
Muleta, MK [1 ]
机构
[1] So Illinois Univ, Dept Civil Engn, Carbondale, IL 62901 USA
关键词
optimization; decision support; watershed management; genetic algorithms;
D O I
10.1080/02508060108686935
中图分类号
TU [建筑科学];
学科分类号
0813 ;
摘要
Non-point source pollution is recognized internationally as a critical environmental problem. In Illinois, soil erosion from agricultural lands is the major source of such pollution. The erosion process, which has been accelerated by human activity, tends to reduce crop productivity and leads to subsequent problems from deposition on farmlands and in water bodies, Comprehensive watershed management, however, can be used to protect these natural resources. In this study, a discrete time optimal control methodology and computational model are developed for determining land use and management alternatives that minimize sediment yield from agriculturally-dominated watersheds. The solution methodology is based on an interface between a genetic algorithm and the U.S. Department Of Agriculture's Soil and Water Assessment Tool. Model analyses are performed on a farm field basis to allow capture of different, local stakeholder perspectives, and crop management alternatives are based on a three-year rotation pattern. The decision support tool is applied to the Big Creek watershed located in the Cache River basin of Southern Illinois. The application demonstrates that the methodology is a valuable tool in advancing comprehensive watershed management. The study represents part Of an ongoing research effort to develop an even more comprehensive decision support tool that uses multicriteria evaluation to address social, economic, and hydrologic issues for integrative watershed management.
引用
收藏
页码:435 / 443
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Effects of a forested state park on stream nutrient concentrations in an agriculturally dominated watershed in the US Midwest
    Farthing, Tessa
    Rintsch, Eileen
    Larson, Owen
    Grudzinski, Bartosz P.
    Fisher, Thomas J.
    McCarty, Jessica L.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 2024, 60 (04): : 851 - 864
  • [22] Impact of Climate and Land Use Change on Streamflow and Sediment Yield in a Snow-Dominated Semiarid Mountainous Watershed
    Khatri, K. B.
    Strong, C.
    von Stackelberg, N.
    Buchert, M.
    Kochanski, A. K.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN WATER RESOURCES ASSOCIATION, 2019, 55 (06): : 1540 - 1563
  • [23] Human Appropriation of Net Primary Production (HANPP) in an Agriculturally-Dominated Watershed, Southeastern USA
    Andersen, C. Brannon
    Donovan, R. Kyle
    Quinn, John E.
    LAND, 2015, 4 (02) : 513 - 540
  • [24] Sediment storage and yield in an urbanized karst watershed
    Hart, EA
    Schurger, SG
    GEOMORPHOLOGY, 2005, 70 (1-2) : 85 - 96
  • [25] WATERSHED SEDIMENT YIELD - A STOCHASTIC APPROACH.
    Woolhiser, D.A.
    Blinco, P.H.
    1600, : 264 - 273
  • [26] SEDIMENT YIELD PREDICTION BASED ON WATERSHED HYDROLOGY
    WILLIAMS, JR
    BERNDT, HD
    TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASAE, 1977, 20 (06): : 1100 - 1104
  • [27] Modeling best management practices to reduce future sediment yield in the Fincha watershed, Ethiopia
    Regasa, Motuma Shiferaw
    Nones, Michael
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SEDIMENT RESEARCH, 2024, 39 (05) : 737 - 749
  • [28] A Geo-Referenced Modeling Environment for Ecosystem Risk Assessment: Organophosphate Pesticides in an Agriculturally Dominated Watershed
    Luo, Yuzhou
    Zhang, Minghua
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY, 2009, 38 (02) : 664 - 674
  • [29] Response of fish communities to environmental changes in an agriculturally dominated watershed (Liao River Basin) in northeastern China
    Gao, Xin
    Zhang, Yuan
    Ding, Sen
    Zhao, Rui
    Meng, Wei
    ECOLOGICAL ENGINEERING, 2015, 76 : 130 - 141
  • [30] Levels of pesticides and trace metals in water, sediment, and fish of a large, agriculturally-dominated river
    Prajapati, Saurabh
    Challis, Jonathan K.
    Jardine, Timothy D.
    Brinkmann, Markus
    CHEMOSPHERE, 2022, 308