Reprint

Rainfall Erosivity in Soil Erosion Processes

Edited by
April 2020
148 pages
  • ISBN978-3-03928-804-5 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-03928-805-2 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Rainfall Erosivity in Soil Erosion Processes that was published in

Biology & Life Sciences
Chemistry & Materials Science
Engineering
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Public Health & Healthcare
Summary
This book gathers recent international research on the association between aggressive rainfall and soil loss and landscape degradation. Different contributions explore these complex relationships and highlight the importance of the spatial patterns of precipitation intensity on land flow under erosive storms, with the support of observational and modelling data. This is a large and multifaceted area of research of growing importance that outlines the challenge of protecting land from natural hazards. The increase in the number of high temporal resolution rainfall records together with the development of new modelling capabilities has opened up new opportunities for the use of large-scale planning and risk prevention methods. These new perspectives should no longer be considered as an independent research topic, but should, above all, support comprehensive land use planning, which is at the core of environmental decision-making and operations. Textbooks such as this one demonstrate the significance of how hydrological science can enable tangible progress in understanding the complexity of water management and its current and future challenges.
Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2020 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
rainfall erosivity; Central Asia; GCMs; soil erosion; climate change; raindrop energy; soil aggregate; splash distance; fractal dimension; Loess Plateau; erosive rainfall; parsimonious modeling; river basin; soil erosion; erosion control; full-scale testing; runoff; simulated rainfall; water quality; rainfall peak; morphological characteristics; runoff; sediment yield; rainfall erosivity; soil erosion; spatial and temporal pattern; Mann–Kendall test; Tibetan Plateau; erosion control; laboratory-scale testing; simulated rainfall; runoff; rainfall erosivity; erosivity density; climate change; regional climate models; quantile regression forests; Greece; erosion control; mulching; net soil erosion; raindrop energy; rainfall erosivity; runoff; sediment yield