Soil Erosion in the United States. Present and Future (2020-2050)
Soil erosion is a significant threat to the environment and long-term land management around the world. Accelerated soil erosion by human activities inflicts extreme changes in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, which is not fully surveyed/predicted for the present and probable future at field-scal...
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Zusammenfassung: | Soil erosion is a significant threat to the environment and long-term land
management around the world. Accelerated soil erosion by human activities
inflicts extreme changes in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems, which is not
fully surveyed/predicted for the present and probable future at field-scales
(30-m). Here, we estimate/predict soil erosion rates by water erosion, (sheet
and rill erosion), using three alternative (2.6, 4.5, and 8.5) Shared
Socioeconomic Pathway and Representative Concentration Pathway (SSP-RCP)
scenarios across the contiguous United States. Field Scale Soil Erosion Model
(FSSLM) estimations rely on a high resolution (30-m) G2 erosion model
integrated by satellite- and imagery-based estimations of land use and land
cover (LULC), gauge observations of long-term precipitation, and scenarios of
the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 6 (CMIP6). The baseline model
(2020) estimates soil erosion rates of 2.32 Mg ha 1 yr 1 with current
agricultural conservation practices (CPs). Future scenarios with current CPs
indicate an increase between 8% to 21% under different combinations of SSP-RCP
scenarios of climate and LULC changes. The soil erosion forecast for 2050
suggests that all the climate and LULC scenarios indicate either an increase in
extreme events or a change in the spatial location of extremes largely from the
southern to the eastern and northeastern regions of the United States. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2207.06579 |