Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Overview
- 1 Soil erosion and conservation in West Africa
- 2 Land degradation, famine, and land resource scenarios in Ethiopia
- 3 Soil erosion and conservation in China
- 4 A case study in Dingxi County, Gansu Province, China
- 5 Soil erosion and conservation in India (status and policies)
- 6 Soil erosion and conservation in Australia
- 7 Soil erosion and conservation in Argentina
- 8 Soil erosion and conservation in the United Kingdom
- 9 Soil erosion and conservation in Poland
- 10 Soil erosion and conservation in the humid tropics
- 11 The management of world soil resources for sustainable agricultural production
- 12 Soil erosion and agricultural productivity
- 13 Vetiver grass for soil and water conservation: prospects and problems
- References
- Index
10 - Soil erosion and conservation in the humid tropics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword
- Overview
- 1 Soil erosion and conservation in West Africa
- 2 Land degradation, famine, and land resource scenarios in Ethiopia
- 3 Soil erosion and conservation in China
- 4 A case study in Dingxi County, Gansu Province, China
- 5 Soil erosion and conservation in India (status and policies)
- 6 Soil erosion and conservation in Australia
- 7 Soil erosion and conservation in Argentina
- 8 Soil erosion and conservation in the United Kingdom
- 9 Soil erosion and conservation in Poland
- 10 Soil erosion and conservation in the humid tropics
- 11 The management of world soil resources for sustainable agricultural production
- 12 Soil erosion and agricultural productivity
- 13 Vetiver grass for soil and water conservation: prospects and problems
- References
- Index
Summary
Introduction
Soil erosion is perhaps the most serious mechanism of land degradation in the tropics generally and the humid tropics in particular (El-Swaify et al., 1982). In the humid tropics, erosion by water, rather than by wind, assumes primary importance. The following discussions, therefore, will be restricted to rainfall-induced erosion.
Opinions differ as to which forms of water erosion are most serious, although gully erosion and mass wasting are the most catastrophic and visually impressive forms. However, any ‘accelerated’ erosion, i.e., erosion with a rate which exceeds the natural rate (prevailing geologically prior to human disturbance) or the rate of soil genesis from underlying parent strata is likely to produce detrimental impacts on the productivity and quality of the ecosystem. As such, even the insidious and visually least impressive sheet (inter-rill) and rill erosion can be seriously detrimental. A complete picture of erosion effects cannot be painted without a total consideration of onsite and offsite impacts. Since runoff water (including floods) and runoff-borne sediments recognize no political boundaries, erosion is always a watershedbased and often a multi-nation problem. Assessing the problem, and the planning and implementation of effective counter-measures, therefore, may well require the institution of not only national commitments and policies but also regional and international ones as well (FAO, 1982a).
The setting
Climatic classifications do not agree on a uniform definition for the humid tropics. Fig. 10.1 shows Troll's classification of tropical climates (El-Swaify and Dangler, 1982).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- World Soil Erosion and Conservation , pp. 233 - 256Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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