TY - JOUR
T1 - Representing the role of soil moisture on erosion resistance in sediment models
T2 - Challenges and opportunities
AU - Moragoda, Nishani
AU - Kumar, Mukesh
AU - Cohen, Sagy
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2022/6/1
Y1 - 2022/6/1
N2 - Soil's resistance to erosion or its susceptibility to resist detachment is a key parameter in the majority of soil erosion and sediment models. Although soil resistance is a function of both the intrinsic properties of soil and dynamic environmental variables (e.g., soil moisture), the influence of the latter is seldom explicitly incorporated in the definition of soil resistance. The significant and complex role of soil moisture content on erosion resistance is recognized by many studies, however, much of the emphasis regarding the role of soil moisture on sediment yield modeling has been on its impacts on runoff generation rather than on soil resistance. In this paper, we synthesize the existing state of knowledge on the processes and mechanisms by which moisture affects erosion resistance of soil, and highlight the challenges and opportunities associated with incorporating this relation in sediment yield assessment models. Through a detailed analysis of literature, we find that dry soil has the lowest resistance to erosion and thus has a high erodibility, and erosion resistance increases (erodibility decreases) with increasing antecedent moisture content until a certain threshold. After this threshold is reached, soil resistance decreases with further increase in moisture content, and soils become more susceptible to erosion. Next, the study identifies the candidate variables that may be used to quantitatively represent the soil's resistance to erosion vis-à-vis moisture, and discuss the challenges in incorporating this relation in modeling frameworks. As a way forward, through a meta-analysis of published data, we develop an exemplar relation that could be used to represent the variation in erosion resistance with soil moisture content. We find that the parameters of such a relation vary significantly across soil types, thus raising the possibility for developing a soil-type based moisture-resistance relations. Overall, this review underscores the considerable impact of antecedent soil moisture on the erosion resistance of soils, and makes a case for integrating the influence of dynamic soil moisture content on erosion resistance into predictive modeling frameworks.
AB - Soil's resistance to erosion or its susceptibility to resist detachment is a key parameter in the majority of soil erosion and sediment models. Although soil resistance is a function of both the intrinsic properties of soil and dynamic environmental variables (e.g., soil moisture), the influence of the latter is seldom explicitly incorporated in the definition of soil resistance. The significant and complex role of soil moisture content on erosion resistance is recognized by many studies, however, much of the emphasis regarding the role of soil moisture on sediment yield modeling has been on its impacts on runoff generation rather than on soil resistance. In this paper, we synthesize the existing state of knowledge on the processes and mechanisms by which moisture affects erosion resistance of soil, and highlight the challenges and opportunities associated with incorporating this relation in sediment yield assessment models. Through a detailed analysis of literature, we find that dry soil has the lowest resistance to erosion and thus has a high erodibility, and erosion resistance increases (erodibility decreases) with increasing antecedent moisture content until a certain threshold. After this threshold is reached, soil resistance decreases with further increase in moisture content, and soils become more susceptible to erosion. Next, the study identifies the candidate variables that may be used to quantitatively represent the soil's resistance to erosion vis-à-vis moisture, and discuss the challenges in incorporating this relation in modeling frameworks. As a way forward, through a meta-analysis of published data, we develop an exemplar relation that could be used to represent the variation in erosion resistance with soil moisture content. We find that the parameters of such a relation vary significantly across soil types, thus raising the possibility for developing a soil-type based moisture-resistance relations. Overall, this review underscores the considerable impact of antecedent soil moisture on the erosion resistance of soils, and makes a case for integrating the influence of dynamic soil moisture content on erosion resistance into predictive modeling frameworks.
KW - Erodibility
KW - Sediment modeling
KW - Soil erosion resistance
KW - Soil loss prediction
KW - Soil moisture
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85129390107&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.earscirev.2022.104032
DO - 10.1016/j.earscirev.2022.104032
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85129390107
SN - 0012-8252
VL - 229
JO - Earth-Science Reviews
JF - Earth-Science Reviews
M1 - 104032
ER -