Abstract

Soil erosion strongly threatens the sustainability of natural ecosystems over the world, especially in the Loess Plateau in China, where has suffered severe soil erosion along with extensive land reclamation and deforestation from the 1950s to the 1970s. The large-scale vegetation restoration practices are supposed to be effective for reducing soil erosion, but the quantitative evaluation of soil erosion, particularly the response of land utilization types and vegetation coverage changes on the mitigation of soil degradation is still not well understood. Plutonium isotopes in soil cores collected from the forest, grassland slope, apple orchard, and cornfield in a typical watershed in the hilly-gully region of the Loess Plateau were analyzed to estimate the soil erosion rates in different land-use types. Widespread soil erosion at rates of 5.1–40.5 t/ha/yr. in this region in the past six decades was estimated. The influences of human activities in the past decades, type of land utilization, level of vegetation coverage, and terrain on the soil erosion in this region were discussed, and the accumulation of the eroded soil in the study sites was explored. Different types of land utilization showed diverse soil erosion rates (forest (slight) < grassland (light) < apple orchard ≈ cornfield (moderate)), indicating that natural vegetation rehabilitation, particularly restoring forest with high vegetation coverage is a practically effective conservation measure for soil erosion control; convex micro-topography on sloping fields is critical in alleviating soil loss by depositing eroded soil.

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