1. Improving the agricultural erosion management in Finland through high-resolution data
- Author
-
Sirpa Piirainen, Jaana Uusi-Kämppä, Timo A. Räsänen, Eila Turtola, and Mika Tähtikarhu
- Subjects
Universal Soil Loss Equation ,Agriculture ,business.industry ,Agricultural land ,Sustainability ,Erosion ,Sediment ,Environmental science ,Spatial variability ,Water resource management ,Spatial distribution ,business - Abstract
Soil erosion reduces the sustainability of agricultural sector by loss of productive soil and through negative impacts on surface waters. In Finland, considerable efforts have been made to reduce soil erosion, but the suspended sediment loads to surface waters have not markedly reduced. A major limitation has been the lack of high-resolution data on erosion risk for efficient targeting of the erosion management efforts. In this study, by using the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE) a two-meter resolution erosion risk data was developed and consequently the spatial distribution of the erosion risk of Finnish agricultural land was analysed. With agricultural management practices of 2019, the average erosion of agricultural land was estimated to be 430 kg ha−1 yr−1, and it varied at the municipality scale from 100 to 1290 kg ha−1 yr−1. At more local scales the erosion risk had even greater variability, and areas with high erosion risk were differently located in terms distances to water bodies. The results also suggest that the past erosion management efforts have not been well-targeted according to the actual erosion risk. Altogether, the results indicate that erosion mitigation measures can be improved by inclusion of high-resolution data in the planning and implementation of the measures, by considering the spatial variability of the erosion risk over multiple spatial scales, and by implementation of location specific erosion reduction measures.
- Published
- 2021