Abstract

Recent research has shown that wind can have a signififi cant inflfl uence on velocity, impact angle and kinetic energy of raindrops, and subsequently increases soil erosion. The aims of this study were to 1) quantify the inflfl uence of wind on water erosion, 2) specififi cally observe the difference in processes betweenwindless rain (WLR) and wind-driven rain (WDR) simulations and 3) test the device’s and test sequence’s practicability. The Portable Wind and Rainfall Simulator (PWRS), recently developed at Trier University for plot-scale in situ assessment of differences in soil erosion with and without the inflfl uence of wind on raindrops, wasused. To facilitate extraction of the inflfl uences of WDR on soil erosion, to avoid systematic errors, and to reduce variability between test plots, a defifi ned order of four consecutive test runs was established: 0) wind simulation, 1) WLR simulation on dry soil, 2) WLR simulation on moist soil, 3) WDR simulation. The tests were conducted on homogenous sandy substrate deposited on an area of 15.2 m 60 m with uniform and smooth surface and low inclination (1°) in the Willem Genet Tunnel of Wageningen University. The results show an increase of eroded sediment ranging from 113 % up to 1108 % for WDR simulations in comparisonto WLR simulations. The increase in runoff was considerably lower (15 % to 71 %), resulting in an increase of sediment concentration between 56 % and 894 %. The results indicate an immense impact of WDR on soil erosion of sandy cohesionless substrate. The experimental setting and measurement proved reliable and reproducible and enables a clear process observation and quantififi cation in the fifi eld.

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