Soil Science

USLE

Universal Soil Loss Equation Definitions

A - Rate of Soil Loss

A represents the mass of soil lost from a unit area per year. For the farming system to be sustainable, the value of A needs to be less than the rate of soil formation.

R - Erosivity of Rainfall

The erosivity (R) is calculated from the kinetic energy and intensity of storms for the period under consideration.

K - Erodibility of Soil

K refers to the erodibility of soil, which is the amount of soil loss under standard conditions. These standard conditions include a bare fallow cultivated up and down a 9% slope. The value of K needs to be averaged over a range of erosivities (storm events).

LS - Length and Slope Factors

LS represents the ratio of the field length and slope compared with the standard length of 22.2 m and slope of 9%.

C - Crop Management Factors

C represents the crop management factor, which is the ratio of soil loss from cropped land compared with continuous bare fallow. Effects of recent cropping history are included in C rather than K. For example, C for conventional tillage one year after pasture is 0.19 but increases to 0.43 after three years.

P - Special Erosion Control Processes

P refers to special erosion control practices, including cultivation on the contour, strip cropping, and minimum tillage.

Cautions

Reasons to be cautious when applying the USLE to Australian Conditions:

  1. US soils are generally deep and geologically young compared with Australian soils, which are old, shallow, and sedimentary. Additionally, Australia has a larger proportion of heavy clay soils, whereas the USLE was based on data mainly from medium-textured soils.
  2. Many factors used in the USLE need to be determined or confirmed for Australian conditions.
  3. Patterns of rainfall intensities differ between Australia and the US.
  4. The USLE is not easily applied to converging or diverging land surfaces and is not applicable to whole catchments.
  5. The USLE is based on averaged data and is not applicable for single storm events.

Questions

 
 

A farmer has been advised that the rate of soil formation in her district is 0.2 mm year-1. The farmer estimated that soil loss from her wheat cropping areas last year was 50 tonnes ha-1. Assuming the soil has a bulk density of 1.2 Mg m-3, is wheat cropping sustainable in the long term?

Correct! The rate of soil loss is 4.2 mm year-1 which is much higher than the sustainable level of 0.2 mm yr-1.

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Which of the following length and slope combinations is more susceptible to erosion?

Correct! From the data given: The LS factor for "A" is 1.0 and for "B" is 0.8. Therefore this is the most susceptible to erosion.

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