Estimation of water erosion rates in Espírito Santo state, Brazil

Authors

Keywords:

Modeling. RUSLE. Soil conservation.

Abstract

Water erosion is a natural geological process that is common in tropical regions. It is important to monitor it to
contain its physical, environmental, and socio-economic impacts. In the Espírito Santo state, Brazil, much of the land is used for
agriculture and studies related to water erosion are scarce. The spatial modeling of water erosion is useful for proposing mitigating
measures because combining it with data from geographic information systems can identify the areas most prone to soil loss. The
Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation - RUSLE, is a model that requires little input data and is easy to use, providing results useful
of helping to mitigate water erosion and promote sustainable land use planning. This study estimates the water erosion rates in the
Espírito Santo state by RUSLE and compares them with the soil loss tolerance (T) limits. The parameters used in the model are the
land use and management, the soil attributes, the relief and the climate factors. Approximately 38.65% of the state’s area shows soil
loss above the T limit (7.79 - 14.14 Mg ha-1 year-1). The areas with steeper slopes and low vegetation cover have most of the highest
erosion rates. The mean annual soil loss of the entire state is 33.55 Mg ha-1 year-1. RUSLE provided a diagnosis useful of directing
erosion mitigation measures to the most susceptible areas, enabling sustainable planning to support the state’s socio-economic development.

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Published

2023-07-07

Issue

Section

Soil Science