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A universal meteorological method to identify potential risk of wind erosion on heavy-textured soils Cover

A universal meteorological method to identify potential risk of wind erosion on heavy-textured soils

Open Access
|Aug 2015

Abstract

The climate of Central Europe, mainly winter seasons with no snow cover at lower altitudes and a spring drought as well, might cause erosion events on heavy-textured soils. The aim of this paper is to define a universal method to identify the potential risk of wind erosion on heavy-textured soils. The categorization of potential wind erosion risk due to meteorological conditions is based on: (i) an evaluation of the number of freeze-thaw episodes forming bare soil surfaces during the cold period of year; and (ii), an evaluation of the number of days with wet soil surfaces during the cold period of year. In the period 2001–2012 (from November to March), episodes with temperature changes from positive to negative and vice versa (thaw-freeze and freeze-thaw cycles) and the effects of wet soil surfaces in connection with aggregate disintegration, are identified. The data are spatially interpolated by GIS tools for areas in the Czech Republic with heavy-textured soils. Blending critical categories is used to locate potential risks. The level of risk is divided into six classes. Those areas identified as potentially most vulnerable are the same localities where the highest number of erosive episodes on heavy-textured soils was documented.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1515/mgr-2015-0011 | Journal eISSN: 2199-6202 | Journal ISSN: 1210-8812
Language: English
Page range: 56 - 62
Submitted on: Jul 10, 2014
Accepted on: Apr 14, 2015
Published on: Aug 21, 2015
Published by: Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Geonics
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2015 Hana Středová, Bronislava Spáčilová, Jana Podhrázská, Filip Chuchma, published by Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of Geonics
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0 License.