Abstract

With the need to increase crop production to meet the needs of a growing population, protecting the productivity of our soil resource is essential. However, conservationists are concerned that conservation practices that were effective in the past may no longer be effective in the future under projected climate change. In winter wheat cropland in the Southern Great Plains of the U.S., increased precipitation intensity and increased aridity associated with warmer temperatures may pose increased risks of soil erosion from vulnerable soils and landscapes. This investigation was undertaken to determine which conservation practices would be necessary and sufficient to hold annual soil erosion by water under a high greenhouse gas emission scenario at or below the present soil erosion levels. Advances in and benefits of agricultural soil and water conservation over the last century in the United States are briefly reviewed, and challenges and climate uncertainties confronting resource conservation in this century are addressed. The Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP) computer model was used to estimate future soil erosion by water from winter wheat cropland in Central Oklahoma and for 10 projected climates and 7 alternative conservation practices. A comparison with soil erosion values under current climate conditions and conventional tillage operations showed that, on average, a switch from conventional to conservation tillage would be sufficient to offset the average increase in soil erosion by water under most projected climates. More effective conservation practices, such as conservation tillage with a summer cover crop would be required to control soil erosion associated with the most severe climate projections. It was concluded that a broad range of conservation tools are available to agriculture to offset projected future increases in soil erosion by water even under assumed worst case climate change scenarios in Central Oklahoma. The problem is not one of a lack of effective conservation tools, but one of adoption and implementation. Increasing the implementation of today’s conservation programs to address current soil erosion problems associated with the large year-to-year climate variability in the Southern Great Plains would greatly contribute towards mitigation of projected future increases in soil erosion due to climate change.

Highlights

  • With the need to increase crop production to meet the needs of a growing population, protecting the productivity of our soil resource is essential

  • Baseline climate was defined as the weather observed at the Water Resources and Erosion Experimental (WRE) experimental watersheds of the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) ARS Grazinglands Research Laboratory, El Reno, Oklahoma, and over the 1977-2012 time period

  • Concerns have been expressed by the conservation community that climate change may increase soil erosion from cropland and that conservation practices that were effective in the past may no longer be adequate under future climate conditions

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Summary

Introduction

With the need to increase crop production to meet the needs of a growing population, protecting the productivity of our soil resource is essential. Atmospheric CO2 concentrations and rainfall amounts and intensities are generally expected to have a positive correlation to plant biomass production, though the impact of rainfall can be negative in cases when intense storm events during the early growing season remove seedlings or when rainfall causes excessive soil moisture conditions that may either influence the timing of planting or plant growth under waterlogged soil conditions (Bassu et al, 2014; Walthall et al, 2012) Implicit in this generalized representation of the impacts of climate on erosion by water is that producers' response to climate change will impact soil erosion rates (Delgado et al, 2013; O'Neal et al, 2005)

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