Soil and water loss from natural and cultivated slopes in Dharabi watershed

Journal Title: Journal of Biodiversity and Environmental Sciences (JBES) - Year 2015, Vol 7, Issue 5

Abstract

Land use is one of the main factors affecting erosion. Present study was carried out at runoff plots in the Dharabi watershed in Chakwal Pakistan for two years. Soil and water loss from a cultivated slope use and an undisturbed slope having natural cover was evaluated to ascertain the impact of conversion of natural slopes into cultivated sloping terraces. A relatively steep slope and a gentle slope having natural vegetation were compared with a gentle slope on cultivated terrace with existing cropping pattern. Significance was checked by Kruskal-Wallis test and pair wise comparisons of water loss from all land uses were done using Mann-Whitney U and Wilcoxin tests. Cultivated slope produced highest soil loss (8.96 Mg ha-1) annually as compared to both undisturbed gentle and steep slopes, viz., 2.08 and 4.66 Mg ha-1 respectively. Cultivated slope produced 107 mm of average annual runoff as compared to 89.7 mm from natural steeper slope and 56.5 mm from gentle natural slope. Annual runoff coefficient increased from 13.9% to 16.7% with conversion of steeper grassland into cultivated land use. Soil and water losses from cultivated slope were higher despite the fact that cultivated slope had lesser slope gradient than undisturbed natural slope. This suggested that cultivated land use i.e. cropland is capable of producing more soil and water loss as compared to natural grassland. The outcome of the study would help making policy decisions regarding the land use change and its downstream impacts.

Authors and Affiliations

Muhammad Nadeem Iqbal, Ghulam Jilani, Akhtar Ali, Safdar Ali, Muhammad Ansar, Irfan Aziz, Muhammad Rafiq Sajjad

Keywords

Related Articles

Role of Zn nutrition in membrane stability, leaf hydration status, and growth of common bean grown under soil moisture stress

Under controlled conditions four common bean genotypes (KS21486, D81083, Akhtar, and COS16) were exposed to drought by reducing soil moisture content from 100±5 % FC to 55±5 % FC, which supplied whether with 4.5 mg Zn...

Effect of salinity and prey algae on Artemia sinica (Anostraca: Artemiidae) growth and survival

The present investigation was carried out to determine the effects of two very important parameters i.e. salinity and micro-algal diets on the growth and survival of Artemia sinica. The animal was obtained in encysted f...

Petrography and geochemistry of metasomatic rocks in Se-Chahun mine, Bafgh, Central Iran

Bafgh mineral region is part of the Central Iran micro continent. Host rocks of Se-Chahun mine are mostly under the effect of sodic, sodic-calcic, potassic and low-temperature alterations. Sodic-calcic alteration was w...

valuation of genetic diversity in pea (Pisum sativum) based on morpho-agronomic characteristics for yield and yield associated traits

The genetic diversity in 128 exotic pea accessions from diverse origin was determined for four qualitative traits flower color (FC), testa color (TC), cotyledon color (CC) and pod shape (PS) and eleven quantitative attr...

Inter-annual variability on the influence of equatorial upwelling on biological productivity along 10oW in the Eastern Equatorial Atlantic (EEA)

Of the 3 boreal summers covered by the EGEE oceanographic cruises between 2005 and 2007, equatorial upwelling was strongest along 10oW in June 2005 and weakest in June 2006. In response to the shoaling pycnocline, cold...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP38662
  • DOI -
  • Views 110
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Muhammad Nadeem Iqbal, Ghulam Jilani, Akhtar Ali, Safdar Ali, Muhammad Ansar, Irfan Aziz, Muhammad Rafiq Sajjad (2015). Soil and water loss from natural and cultivated slopes in Dharabi watershed. Journal of Biodiversity and Environmental Sciences (JBES), 7(5), -. https://europub.co.uk/articles/-A-38662