Managing ditches for agroecological engineering of landscape. A review

Agriculture must now feed the planet with the lowest environmental impact. Landscape management is a means to protect natural resources from the adverse impacts. In particular, the adequate management of ditches could improve crop quality. Here, we review ditch design and maintenance. We found the f...

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Veröffentlicht in:Agronomy for sustainable development 2015, Vol.35 (3), p.999-1020
Hauptverfasser: Dollinger, Jeanne, Dagès, Cécile, Bailly, Jean-Stéphane, Lagacherie, Philippe, Voltz, Marc
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container_end_page 1020
container_issue 3
container_start_page 999
container_title Agronomy for sustainable development
container_volume 35
creator Dollinger, Jeanne
Dagès, Cécile
Bailly, Jean-Stéphane
Lagacherie, Philippe
Voltz, Marc
description Agriculture must now feed the planet with the lowest environmental impact. Landscape management is a means to protect natural resources from the adverse impacts. In particular, the adequate management of ditches could improve crop quality. Here, we review ditch design and maintenance. We found the following major points: (1) ditch networks have been primarily designed for waterlogging control and erosion prevention. Nonetheless, when properly managed, farm ditches provide other important ecosystem services, namely groundwater recharge, flood attenuation, water purification, or biodiversity conservation. (2) All ditch ecosystem services depend on many geochemical, geophysical, and biological processes, whose occurrence and intensity vary largely with ditch characteristics. (3) The major ruling characteristics are vegetative cover; ditch morphology; slope orientation; reach connections such as piped sections and weirs, soil, sediment and litter properties, biota, and biofilms; and network topology. (4) Ditch maintenance is an efficient engineering tool to optimize ecosystem services because several ditch characteristics change widely with ditch maintenance. For instance, maintenance operations, dredging, chemical weeding, and burning improve waterlogging and soil erosion control, but they are negative for biodiversity conservation. Mowing has low adverse effects on biodiversity conservation and water purification when mowing is performed at an adequate season. The effects of burning have been poorly investigated.
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subjects adverse effects
Agriculture
biodiversity
biofilm
Biomedical and Life Sciences
burning
chemical weed control
crop quality
dredging
ecosystem services
environmental impact
erosion control
farms
flooded conditions
geophysics
groundwater recharge
landscape management
landscapes
Life Sciences
mowing
Review Article
sediments
soil
soil erosion
Soil Science & Conservation
Sustainable Development
water conservation
water purification
weirs
title Managing ditches for agroecological engineering of landscape. A review
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