Abstract

This paper demonstrates that land use could enhance spatial discrimination of soil magnetism in a homogeneous watershed, and such differences help infer alterations in sediment sources and erosion. One sediment core was sampled from a reservoir built in 1958 and fifteen soil profiles from its catchment on the southern Guizhou Plateau, SW China. The whole watershed was covered by yellow earth developed on limestone. Magnetic measurements and granulometric analysis were performed on the soils and sediments while TOC and TN analysis on two soil profiles and 137Cs analysis on the sediment core. Information of seven years' land-use was derived from remote sensing images. The farmland and grassland soils had different magnetic characteristics while the downwards distributions of TOC and C/N were similar in the two profiles. The grassland soils had higher HIRM, lower χfd% and IRM300mT/SIRM. The higher χfd% and IRM300mT/SIRM of the farmland soils suggested stronger pedogenesis under cultivation. The average HIRM, χfd% and IRM300mT/SIRM were 38 and 334 10-6 A m2 kg−1, 5.7 and 3.6%, and 0.91 and 0.66 for the farmland and grassland soils. The farmland soils were finer probably due to tillage. The reservoir has been closely surrounded mainly by the grassland whereas the farmland, embedded with patches of the grassland, has occurred in the terrains relatively distant from the reservoir. The sediments of 1958–1985 had lower HIRM (156 10-6 A m2 kg−1) and higher IRM300mT/SIRM (0.79), indicating greater contributions of the remote farmland soils mixed with grassland soils and stronger erosion. HIRM increased (229 10-6 A m2 kg−1) and IRM300mT/SIRM decreased (0.67) in the sediments of 1985–2019, implying decreased distant-soil contributions and relatively increased input of the grassland soil closely around the reservoir. Erosion thus weakened, as proven by the finer sediments. The declining erosion was mainly due to farmland shrinkage and grassland expansion.

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