Tillage erosion intensity in the South Canterbury Downlands, New Zealand
Timothy A. Quine, Les R. Basher and Andrew P. Nicholas
Australian Journal of Soil Research
41(4) 789 - 807
Published: 18 July 2003
Abstract
Growing awareness of the pressure on land resources emphasises the need to understand the full range of processes operating in human-impacted agroecosystems. In such systems one of the greatest threats to long-term sustainability is the erosion and depauperation of soil, which, until recently, was attributed almost entirely to water erosion. This study builds on recent awareness of the significance of tillage erosion and presents the results of an experimental investigation of tillage erosion due to mouldboard ploughing. Aluminium cubes were used to trace soil translocation as a result of a single pass of the plough perpendicular to the contour in downslope and upslope directions. In common with others studies, translocation was found to be directly proportional to slope tangent for downslope tillage and unrelated to slope for upslope tillage. The influence of non-topographic variables on the relationship between translocation distance and slope was partially filtered out by using the ratio of translocation distances in the tillage direction and perpendicular to tillage. Shallow plough depths of 0.17 m produced tillage detachment of only 230 kg/m2; however, a high tillage translocation coefficient of 1.16 m/pass resulted in a soil flux coefficient of 265 kg/m.pass. The high tillage translocation coefficient is probably partly due to the loose nature of the regularly cultivated loessic soil, however, on the basis of comparison with other published studies, it is suggested that the high tillage speed of 7 km/h is the principal control on the magnitude of the coefficient. Analysis of the available data suggests that a 30% reduction in tillage erosion intensity could be obtained by reduction of the tillage speed to 4 km/h; nevertheless, more experimental work is needed to test this suggestion. On the transect studied, a pair of opposing passes of the mouldboard plough would produce erosion rates as high as 5.1 kg/m2.year (51 t/ha.year) from shoulder slope elements and as high as 1.9 kg/m2.year (19 t/ha.year) over half of the slope length. This pattern matched closely the distribution of 137Cs-derived erosion rates documented previously for a nearby field, suggesting that for this environment, as for many mechanised agricultural systems, tillage erosion is the dominant soil redistribution process and the greatest threat to long-term sustained on-site productivity. Reduction of tillage erosion should, therefore, be seen as a priority in the development of sustainable land management strategies.Keywords: sustainability, soil erosion, soil redistribution, soil productivity, caesium-137, tracers.
https://doi.org/10.1071/SR02063
© CSIRO 2003