Rule-based analysis of throughfall kinetic energy to evaluate biotic and abiotic factor thresholds to mitigate erosive power

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Philipp Goebes - , University of Tübingen (Author)
  • Karsten Schmidt - , University of Tübingen (Author)
  • Steffen Seitz - , University of Tübingen (Author)
  • Felix Stumpf - , University of Tübingen (Author)
  • Goddert von Oheimb - , Chair of Biodiversity and Nature Conservation (Author)
  • Thomas Scholten - , University of Tübingen (Author)

Abstract

Below vegetation, throughfall kinetic energy (TKE) is an important factor to express the potential of rainfall to detach soil particles and thus for predicting soil erosion rates. TKE is affected by many biotic (e.g. tree height, leaf area index) and abiotic (e.g. throughfall amount) factors because of changes in rain drop size and velocity. However, studies modelling TKE with a high number of those factors are lacking.
This study presents a new approach to model TKE. We used 20 biotic and abiotic factors to evaluate thresholds of those factors that can mitigate TKE and thus decrease soil erosion. Using these thresholds, an optimal set of biotic and abiotic factors was identified to minimize TKE. The model approach combined recursive feature elimination, random forest (RF) variable importance and classification and regression trees (CARTs). TKE was determined using 1405 splash cup measurements during five rainfall events in a subtropical Chinese tree plantation with five-year-old trees in 2013.
Our results showed that leaf area, tree height, leaf area index and crown area are the most prominent vegetation traits to model TKE. To reduce TKE, the optimal set of biotic and abiotic factors was a leaf area lower than 6700 mm2, a tree height lower than 290 cm combined with a crown base height lower than 60 cm, a leaf area index smaller than 1, more than 47 branches per tree and using single tree species neighbourhoods. Rainfall characteristics, such as amount and duration, further classified high or low TKE. These findings are important for the establishment of forest plantations that aim to minimize soil erosion in young succession stages using TKE modelling.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)431 - 449
Journal Progress in physical geography : an international journal of environmental and earth system sciences
Volume40
Publication statusPublished - 2016
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Scopus 84966989729
ORCID /0000-0001-7408-425X/work/148144190

Keywords