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agricultural and biological sciences

Soil crusting and infiltration on steep slopes in northern Thailand

European Journal of Soil Science, Volume 54, No. 3, Year 2003

Predicting the rate at which rain infiltrates on steep slopes is very uncertain. There is no consistent information in the literature. We have therefore related infiltrability to slope gradient under field conditions by experimenting on a gravelly loamy soil occupying the upper half of a cultivated convex hill in northern Thailand. Fifteen 1 m × 1 m plots with slope gradients ranging from 16 to 63% were established, and simulated rain was allowed to fall on them at controlled rates and for fixed times. We obtained the following results. The surface fell 0.4-7.2 mm due to compaction and soil loss. The proportions of crust (0-40%) and embedded gravel (10-60%), the runoff coefficient (0.05-0.78 mm mm-1), the mean sediment concentrations (0-5.6 g l-1), and soil detachment (10-313 g m-2) were more pronounced on the gentle slopes than on the steep ones. The steady final infiltration rate (1-107 mm hour-1) increased sharply with increasing slope gradient. Microaggregates tended to behave like sand and become tightly packed on gentle slopes (packing crust). These results suggest that the vertical component of kinetic energy, which is greater on gentle slopes, has a dominant role. Nevertheless, the differences in compaction and in sediment concentration could not be ascribed to the vertical component of kinetic energy alone. On steep slopes the horizontal component of the kinetic energy is transformed into shear stress, hampering the development of crusts so that water can still infiltrate. On steeper slopes, the water film was thinner, thereby limiting the role of splash. We conclude that the relationship between slope gradient and infiltrability depends on the nature of the soil and must be examined in the light of surface crusting processes.
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Citations: 164
Authors: 4
Affiliations: 3
Research Areas
Environmental