Abstract

Climate change and agricultural intensification are expected to increase soil erosion and sediment production from arable land in many regions. However, so far, most studies have been based on short-term monitoring and/or modeling, making it difficult to assess their reliability in terms of long-term changes. We present the results from a unique data set consisting of measurements of sediment loads from a 60ha catchment (the HOAL Petzenkirchen in Austria) over a time window spanning 72 years. Specifically, we compare Period I (1946–1954) and Period II (2002–2017) by fitting sediment rating curves for the growth and dormant seasons for each of the periods. The results suggest a significant increase in sediment yield from Period I to Period II with an average of 11.6 ± 10.8 ton·yr−1 to 63.6 ± 84.0 ton·yr−1. The sediment flux changed mainly due to a shift of the sediment rating curves (SRC), given that the annual streamflow varied little between the periods (5.6 l·s−1 and 7.6 l·s−1, respectively, on average). The slopes of the log regression lines of the SRC for the growing season and the dormant season of Period I were 16.72 and 4.9, respectively, whilst they were 5.38 and 1.17 for Period II, respectively. Climate change, considered in terms of rainfall erosivity, was not responsible for this shift, given that erosivity decreased by 30.4 % from the dormant season of Period I to that of Period II, and no significant difference was found between the growing seasons of Periods I and II. However, the sediment flux changes can be explained by changes in crop type and parcel structure. During low and median streamflow conditions (i.e. Q < Q20 %), land consolidation in Period II (i.e. theparcel effect) did not exert an apparent influence on sediment production. Whilst with increasing stream flow (Q > Q20 %), parcel structure played an increasingly role in sediment yield contribution, and leading to a dominant role due to enhanced sediment connectivity in the landscape at extremely high flow conditions (i.e. Q > Q2 %). The increase in cropland in Period II at the expense of grassland had an unfavourable effect on sediment flux, independent of streamflow, with declining relevance as flow increased. We conclude that both land cover change and land consolidation should be accounted for simultaneously when assessing sediment flux changes. Especially during extremely high flow conditions, land consolidation substantially alters sediment fluxes, which is most relevant for long-term sediment loads and land degradation. Increased attention to improving parcel structure is therefore needed in climate adaptation and agricultural catchment management.

Highlights

  • Soil erosion is a risk of worldwide importance because of its environmental and 55 economic consequences (García-Ruiz, 2010; Prosdocimi et al, 2016)

  • 110 Even though numerous studies have addressed the effect of climate change and land management on soil erosion and sediment production, most studies have been based on short-term monitoring and/or modeling, which makes it difficult to assess their reliability in terms of long-term changes that are the most relevant from a practical perspective

  • This paper aims at evaluating the relative roles of climate change, land use and land cover changes (LUCC) and change of land structure on sediment production

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Summary

Introduction

Soil erosion is a risk of worldwide importance because of its environmental and 55 economic consequences (García-Ruiz, 2010; Prosdocimi et al, 2016). 95 Van Oost et al (2000) and Devaty et al (2019) evaluated the role of landscape structure by accounting for its spatial connectivity using modelling approaches and found that landscape structure is an essential factor when assessing the risk of soil erosion affected by land-use changes Both studies emphasized the potential impacts of parcel structure changes on sediment production through altering hydrological and 100 sediment connectivity. The catchment is the 66 ha Hydrological Open Air Laboratory (HOAL) Petzenkirchen (Blöschl et al, 2016), which, in addition to being exposed to climate change, has experienced a significant change in land use and land cover as well as parcel structure for erosion control during the past decades Both discharge and sediment yield have been monitored in the HOAL catchment since the 1940s. We aim at i) exploring how the sediment regime has changed between the periods of 1946-1954 and 2002-2017; ii) analyzing whether climate change or land-use changes (or both) were responsible for any change in sediment regime; and iii) identifying the relevance of land structure change (i.e. land consolidation) on erosion control compared to that of a change in land use or cover

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