Publication | Open Access
Soil erosion and agricultural sustainability
2.1K
Citations
45
References
2007
Year
Precision AgricultureEngineeringGeomorphologyLand UseAgricultural EconomicsSoil ConservationLand DegradationSoil ProductionErosion PredictionHillslope Soil ProductionSustainable AgricultureAgricultural Land UseTillage ToolPublic HealthGeographySoil DegradationAgricultureSedimentologySediment TransportDeforestationSoil ErosionErosion Rates
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 over time scales comparable to the longevity of major civilizations, no-till agriculture produces erosion rates much closer to soil production rates and therefore could provide a foundation for sustainable agriculture.
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