Soil erosion and agricultural sustainability
University of Washington · Earth and Space Research
Abstract
Data drawn from a global compilation of studies quantitatively confirm the long-articulated contention that erosion rates from conventionally plowed agricultural fields average 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than rates of soil production, erosion under native vegetation, and long-term geological erosion. The general equivalence of the latter indicates that, considered globally, hillslope soil production and erosion evolve to balance geologic and climate forcing, whereas conventional plow-based agriculture increases erosion rates enough to prove unsustainable. In contrast to how net soil erosion rates in conventionally plowed fields ( approximately 1 mm/yr) can erode through a typical hillslope soil profile…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.87
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 63
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Erosion
- Environmental science
- Agriculture
- Sustainability
- Vegetation (pathology)
- Hydrology (agriculture)
- Soil production function
- Shifting cultivation
- Zero hunger