Geospatial assessment of bioenergy land use and its impacts on soil erosion in the U.S. Midwest

Agricultural land use change, especially corn expansion since 2000s, has been accelerating to meet the growing bioenergy demand of the United States. This study identifies the environmentally sensitive lands (ESLs) in the U.S. Midwest using the distance-weighted Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of environmental management 2017-04, Vol.190, p.188-196
Hauptverfasser: SooHoo, William M., Wang, Cuizhen, Li, Huixuan
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Agricultural land use change, especially corn expansion since 2000s, has been accelerating to meet the growing bioenergy demand of the United States. This study identifies the environmentally sensitive lands (ESLs) in the U.S. Midwest using the distance-weighted Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) associated with bioenergy land uses extracted from USDA Cropland Data Layers. The impacts of soil erosion to downstream wetlands and waterbodies in the river basin are counted in the RUSLE with an inverse distance weighting approach. In a GIS-ranking model, the ESLs in 2008 and 2011 (two representative years of corn expansion) are ranked based on their soil erosion severity in crop fields. Under scenarios of bioenergy land use change (corn to grass and grass to corn) on two land types (ESLs and non-ESLs) at three magnitudes (5%, 10% and 15% change), this study assesses the potential environmental impacts of bioenergy land use at a basin level. The ESL distributions and projected trends vary geographically responding to different agricultural conversions. Results support the idea of re-planting native prairie grasses in the identified High and Severe rank ESLs for sustainable bioenergy management in this important agricultural region. [Display omitted] •Corn expansion in the Midwest varies geographically, reflecting different land-use conversions.•A distance factor is added into RUSLE to assess land-use impacts to downstream wetlands.•Acreages of environmentally sensitive lands are increasing due to corn expansion.•This study suggests optimal sites for re-planting native prairie grasses on High-Severe ESLs.
ISSN:0301-4797
1095-8630
DOI:10.1016/j.jenvman.2016.12.057