The Importance of Measuring Soil Erosion by Water at the Field Scale: A Review
- Authors: Nicosia Alessio; Francesco Giuseppe Carollo, Costanza Di Stefano, Vincenzo Palmeri, Vincenzo Pampalone, Maria Angela Serio, Vincenzo Bagarello, Vito Ferro
- Publication year: 2024
- Type: Review essay (rassegna critica)
- OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/665471
Abstract
Water erosion is a significant global threat due to the high soil loss rate and all its consequent implications. Technologies to predict erosion are strongly related to measurements and vice versa. Measurements can simply provide empirical evidence of the erosion process and are hard to extrapolate in time and space. Measurements were used to develop some erosion models, such as the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE), and also for their calibration and validation. Several measurement techniques are used to collect soil erosion data at different spatial and temporal scales, but they cannot be considered fully accurate in any experimental condition. Each technique exhibits advantages and disadvantages, so extensive knowledge of their feasibility, accuracy, and limitations is required to correctly plan experiments and use the performed measurements. In this paper, recent scientific developments on the measurement of rainfall erosivity, soil loss at the plot scale, and rill and gully erosion using close-range photogrammetry are presented. Further considerations are made on the quality of soil erosion measurements and the usefulness and importance of measuring plot soil loss. Our critical analysis highlighted that the techniques reported in the literature are a solid basis, which, however, should be developed to improve their range of applicability and data quality.