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Assessment of soil erosion on arable land using Cs measurements: a case study from Jaslovske Bohunice, Slovakia
Authors:Emil Fulajtar  
Affiliation:Department of Pedology, Soil Science and Conservation Research Institute, Gagarinova 10, 827 13, Bratislava, Slovakia
Abstract:This study was carried out to obtain a representative set of data on long-term erosion rates from a pilot area located close to the Jaslovske Bohunice village, in western Slovakia using the 137Cs-method. The study area chosen was representative of the hilly loess cultivated areas of Slovakia. The sampling strategy was based on a multiple transect approach. Analyses of the samples for 137Cs activity were made at the Nuclear Power Plant Research Institute, Jaslovske Bohunice. The 137Cs-method was used to obtain long-term estimates of soil erosion in the Jaslovske Bohunice site, a representative hilly loess cultivated area of Slovakia. The estimated reference 137Cs inventory was 2910 Bq m−2, with a coefficient of variation of 4.3%.Examination of the 137Cs redistribution in relation to the topography of the study area revealed that, within individual transects the 137Cs inventories were closely related to major landforms. The 137Cs inventories were considerably lower on the slopes than on the plateau and they were highest in the valley. However, when plotted against a selection of individual quantitative slope parameters, i.e. the S and the LS factors of the USLE or slope inclination, the correlations obtained were weak.Three conversion models, i.e. the proportional model (PM), the simplified mass balance model (MBM1) and the standard mass balance model (MBM2), from the set of models developed at Exeter University, Great Britain were selected to interpret the resulting 137Cs measurements into soil erosion/deposition rates. The mean erosion rates estimated with the PM were 22.4, 35.6 with MBM1 and 17.3 t ha−1 per year with MBM2. There was a good agreement between the average of these mean erosion rates (25.1 t ha−1 per year) for the Jaslovske Bohunice site and the estimated mean soil erosion rate obtained for small erosion plots (15 t ha−1 per year) for conditions similar to the study site. Nevertheless, further research on the application of the 137Cs-method, in particular the independent validation of the results obtained, is needed. Several issues requiring further study have been highlighted.
Keywords:Soil erosion   Erosion rate   Soil redistribution   Conversion models   137Cs-method
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