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A characterization of soil erosion in cultivated watersheds in Manitoba's Red River Valley using sediment budgeting, and its implications for managing soil erosion’s impacts

Authors :
Koiter, Alexander (Soil Science)
Grosshans, Richard (Biosystems Engineering)
Ali, Genevieve (University of Guelph)
Lobb, David
Brooks, Brendan
Koiter, Alexander (Soil Science)
Grosshans, Richard (Biosystems Engineering)
Ali, Genevieve (University of Guelph)
Lobb, David
Brooks, Brendan
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Soil erosion accelerated by agriculture reduces agricultural productivity and compromises the function of drainage infrastructure and downstream water quality. In Manitoba, the relationship between soil erosion and water quality is of particular concern, following measurable declines in Lake Winnipeg’s water quality since the 1990s. Understanding the state of soil erosion, transportation, and deposition in the Red River Valley is of interest, due to the extensive cultivation of the river’s watershed and its contribution to total flow (and by extension, sediment flux) into the lake. Sediment budgets were drafted for two sub-watersheds of the well-studied Boyne-Morris and La Salle River watersheds, located in the Red River Valley, and coded 05OF024 and 05OG008 by the Water Survey of Canada (WSC), respectively. To characterize soil erosion, the sediment budgets used published National Agri-Environmental Health Analysis and Reporting Program (NAHARP) soil erosion risk estimates calculated with the SoilERI model. Sediment transportation was quantified using flow and total suspended solids (TSS) measurements made by the WSC and other organizations. Deposition within the sub-watersheds was quantified through measurements made in road-side ditches (a common sediment sink in the Red River watershed) and inferred through imbalances in the sediment budgets. Rates of soil erosion, deposition within, and transportation out of the 05OF024 sub-watershed were an order of magnitude greater than in the 05OG008 sub-watershed due to differences in basin scale, but relative differences in their rates in each basin were the same. Rates of erosion were 1 order of magnitude greater than rates of deposition in road-side ditches and 3 orders of magnitude greater than transportation past the sub-watershed outlets. Differences between rates of soil erosion and deposition in road-side ditches were noted and attributed to unmeasured deposition in cultivated fields. Rates of deposition in such se

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1457633014
Document Type :
Electronic Resource