The effect of fluctuations in moisture on resistance to soil erosion in the process of dust production (Case study of Lake Bazangan , Iran)

نوع مقاله : مقاله پژوهشی

نویسندگان

1 Mahya Hassanzade Eskafi: Master Student, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad

2 Associate Professor, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad.

3 Professor, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad.

چکیده

The drying of lakes and wetlands is a significant challenge to the hydrological cycle of resources, to human life, and to animal and plant species. The bed soils of lakes in arid and semi-arid regions become dry and wet due to various factors, such as global warming, which decrease and increase water levels in lakes. Therefore, field measurements and surveys are necessary in the localities of these natural ecosystems and can improve the management and protective measures against various hazardous processes including wind-driven soil erosion in these areas. The purpose of this research was to evaluate the soil erosion potential of Lake Bazangan, a natural lake located in the province of Khorasan Razavi, Iran. Experiments of soil properties were performed to study the rate of soil wind erosion. Wind tunnels were used to model the airflow. The results showed that the clay particle content significantly reduced soil wind erosion rates. Because of SAR's effect on the dispersion of clay particles, the erosion rate increased exponentially with soil solidification. Soil moisture had a significant effect on the cohesion of clay particles and, therefore, reduced the soil wind erosion rate. In this study, the surface erosion of the samples was examined using a calibrated Kinect® sensor, developed by Microsoft, due to easy access, cost-effectiveness, and high accuracy of its sensors. It was observed that sand particles could move easily, with a significant effect on the rate of soil loss.

کلیدواژه‌ها

موضوعات


عنوان مقاله [English]

The effect of fluctuations in moisture on resistance to soil erosion in the process of dust production (Case study of Lake Bazangan , Iran)

نویسندگان [English]

  • Mahya Hassanzadeh Eskafi 1
  • Kazem Esmaili 2
  • Saeedreza Khodashenas 3
1 Mahya Hassanzade Eskafi: Master Student, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad
2 Associate Professor, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad.
3 Professor, Department of Water Science and Engineering, Faculty of Agriculture, Ferdowsi University of Mashhad.
چکیده [English]

The drying of lakes and wetlands is a significant challenge to the hydrological cycle of resources, to human life, and to animal and plant species. The bed soils of lakes in arid and semi-arid regions become dry and wet due to various factors, such as global warming, which decrease and increase water levels in lakes. Therefore, field measurements and surveys are necessary in the localities of these natural ecosystems and can improve the management and protective measures against various hazardous processes including wind-driven soil erosion in these areas. The purpose of this research was to evaluate the soil erosion potential of Lake Bazangan, a natural lake located in the province of Khorasan Razavi, Iran. Experiments of soil properties were performed to study the rate of soil wind erosion. Wind tunnels were used to model the airflow. The results showed that the clay particle content significantly reduced soil wind erosion rates. Because of SAR's effect on the dispersion of clay particles, the erosion rate increased exponentially with soil solidification. Soil moisture had a significant effect on the cohesion of clay particles and, therefore, reduced the soil wind erosion rate. In this study, the surface erosion of the samples was examined using a calibrated Kinect® sensor, developed by Microsoft, due to easy access, cost-effectiveness, and high accuracy of its sensors. It was observed that sand particles could move easily, with a significant effect on the rate of soil loss.

کلیدواژه‌ها [English]

  • Particle distribution
  • Wet and dry
  • Shear strength
  • Wind tunnel
  • Laser scanning
1-    Afshar, A.A., Hasanzadeh, Y., Besalatpour, A.A., Pourreza-Bilondi, M., 2017. Climate change forecasting in a mountainous data scarce watershed using CMIP5 models under representative concentration pathways. Theor. Appl. Climatol. 129, 683–699.
 
2- Anderson, J.D., 2005. Ludwig Prandtl’s boundary layer. Phys. Today 58, 42–48.
 
3- Astm, D., 1994. 3080-90: Standard test method for direct shear test of soils under consolidated drained conditions. Annu. B. ASTM Stand. 4, 290–295.
 
4- Avecilla, F., Panebianco, J.E., Buschiazzo, D.E., 2015. Variable effects of saltation and soil properties on wind erosion of different textured soils. Aeolian Res. 18, 145–153.
 
5- Behrouzi-Rad, B., n.d. Difference and Similarity in the Structure of the Population of Water birds Between Natural Bazangan Lake and Shahid Yaghoubi Dam Reservoir. Mar. Sci. 1.
 
6- Ben-Gal, A., Borochov-Neori, H., Yermiyahu, U., Shani, U., 2009. Is osmotic potential a more appropriate property than electrical conductivity for evaluating whole-plant response to salinity? Environ. Exp. Bot. 65, 232–237.
 
7- Biglarfadafan, M., Danehkar, A., Pourebrahim, S., Shabani, A.A., Moeinaddini, M., 2016. Application of Strategic Fuzzy Assessment for Environmental Planning; Case of Bird Watch Zoning in Wetlands. Open J. Geol. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojg.2016.611099
 
8- Blank, R.R., Young, J.A., Allen, F.L., 1999. Aeolian dust in a saline playa environment, Nevada, USA. J. Arid Environ. 41, 365–381.
 
9- Carroll, Z.L., Oliver, M.A., 2005. Exploring the spatial relations between soil physical properties and apparent electrical conductivity. Geoderma 128, 354–374.
 
10- Chen, W., Zhibao, D., Zhenshan, L., Zuotao, Y., 1996. Wind tunnel test of the influence of moisture on the erodibility of loessial sandy loam soils by wind. J. Arid Environ. 34, 391–402.
 
11- Chepil, W.S., 1956. Influence of moisture on erodibility of soil by wind. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 20, 288–292.
 
12- Chepil, W.S., 1954. Factors that influence clod structure and erodibility of soil by wind: III. Calcium carbonate and decomposed organic matter. Soil Sci. 77, 473–480.
 
13- Chepil, W.S., 1951. Properties of soil which influence wind erosion: IV. State of dry aggregate structure. Soil Sci. 72, 387–402.
 
14- Choobari, O.A., Zawar-Reza, P., Sturman, A., 2014. The global distribution of mineral dust and its impacts on the climate system: A review. Atmos. Res. 138, 152–165.
 
15- Ciric, V., Manojlovic, M., Nesic, L., Belic, M., 2012. Soil dry aggregate size distribution: effects of soil type and land use. J. soil Sci. plant Nutr. 12, 689–703.
 
16- Elmore, A.J., Kaste, J.M., Okin, G.S., Fantle, M.S., 2008. Groundwater influences on atmospheric dust generation in deserts. J. Arid Environ. 72, 1753–1765.
 
17- Emami, H., Astaraei, A.R., Fotovat, A., Khotabaei, M., 2014. Effect of soil conditioners on cation ratio of soil structural stability, structural stability indicators in a sodic soil, and on dry weight of maize. Arid L. Res. Manag. 28, 325–339.
 
18- Emami, H., Neyshabouri, M.R., Shorafa, M., 2012. Relationships between some soil quality indicators in different agricultural soils from Varamin, Iran.
 
19- Gile, L.H., Grossman, R.B., 1979. The desert project soil monograph: Soils and landscapes of a desert region astride the Rio Grande Valley near Las Cruces, New Mexico. US Dept. of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service.
 
20- Gillette, D., 1978. A wind tunnel simulation of the erosion of soil: Effect of soil texture, sandblasting, wind speed, and soil consolidation on dust production. Atmos. Environ. 12, 1735–1743.
 
21- Gillies, J.A., Nickling, W.G., Nikolich, G., Etyemezian, V., 2017. A wind tunnel study of the aerodynamic and sand trapping properties of porous mesh 3-dimensional roughness elements. Aeolian Res. 25, 23–35.
 
22- Gomes, L., Arrue, J.L., Lopez, M. V, Sterk, G., Richard, D., Gracia, R., Sabre, M., Gaudichet, A., Frangi, J.P., 2003. Wind erosion in a semiarid agricultural area of Spain: the WELSONS project. Catena 52, 235–256.
 
23- Goossens, D., 2004. Effect of soil crusting on the emission and transport of wind-eroded sediment: field measurements on loamy sandy soil. Geomorphology 58, 145–160.
 
24- Grini, A., Myhre, G., Zender, C.S., Isaksen, I.S.A., 2005. Model simulations of dust sources and transport in the global atmosphere: Effects of soil erodibility and wind speed variability. J. Geophys. Res. Atmos. 110.
25- Ju, T., Li, X., Zhang, H., Cai, X., Song, Y., 2018. Effects of soil moisture on dust emission from 2011 to 2015 observed over the Horqin Sandy Land area, China. Aeolian Res. 32, 14–23.
 
26- Karimi, A., Khademi, H., Kehl, M., Jalalian, A., 2009. Distribution, lithology and provenance of peridesert loess deposits in northeastern Iran. Geoderma 148, 241–250.
 
27- Karimi, A., Khormali, F., Wang, X., 2017. Discrimination of sand dunes and loess deposits using grain-size analysis in northeastern Iran. Arab. J. Geosci. 10, 275.
 
28- Karimi, A., Soodmand, A., Khormali, F., 2014. Grain size parameters of aeolian deposits in Sarakhas area, Norteastern Iran, in: International Symposium on Loess, Soils and Climate Change in Southern Eurasia.
 
29- Kim, D.S., Cho, G.H., White, B.R., 2000. A wind-tunnel study of atmospheric boundary-layer flow over vegetated surfaces to suppress PM10 emission on Owens (dry) Lake. Boundary-layer Meteorol. 97, 309–329.
 
30- Korkanc, S.Y., Ozyuvaci, N., Hizal, A., 2008. Impacts of land use conversion on soil properties and soil erodibility. J. Environ. Biol. 29, 363.
 
31- Liu, D., Abuduwaili, J., Lei, J., Wu, G., Gui, D., 2011. Wind erosion of saline playa sediments and its ecological effects in Ebinur Lake, Xinjiang, China. Environ. Earth Sci. 63, 241–250.
 
32- Liu, L.-Y., Li, X.-Y., Shi, P.-J., Gao, S.-Y., Wang, J.-H., Ta, W.-Q., Song, Y., Liu, M.-X., Wang, Z., Xiao, B.-L., 2007. Wind erodibility of major soils in the farming-pastoral ecotone of China. J. Arid Environ. 68, 611–623.
 
33- Maltby, E., Acreman, M.C., 2011. Ecosystem services of wetlands: pathfinder for a new paradigm. Hydrol. Sci. J. 56, 1341–1359.
 
34- Marinello, F., Pezzuolo, A., Gasparini, F., Arvidsson, J., Sartori, L., 2015. Application of the Kinect sensor for dynamic soil surface characterization. Precis. Agric. 16, 601–612.
 
35- Munkhtsetseg, E., Shinoda, M., Gillies, J.A., Kimura, R., King, J., Nikolich, G., 2016. Relationships between soil moisture and dust emissions in a bare sandy soil of Mongolia. Particuology 28, 131–137.
 
36- Nicholson, K.W., 1993. Wind tunnel experiments on the resuspension of particulate material. Atmos. Environ. Part A. Gen. Top. 27, 181–188.
 
37- Okhravi, R., Amini, A., 2001. Characteristics and provenance of the loess deposits of the Gharatikan watershed in Northeast Iran. Glob. Planet. Change 28, 11–22.
 
38- Orlovsky, L., Orlovsky, N., Durdyev, A., 2005. Dust storms in Turkmenistan. J. Arid Environ. 60, 83–97.
 
39- Panayiotopoulos, K.P., Barbayiannis, N., Papatolios, K., 2004. Influence of electrolyte concentration, sodium adsorption ratio, and mechanical disturbance on dispersed clay particle size and critical flocculation concentration in Alfisols. Commun. Soil Sci. Plant Anal. 35, 1415–1434.
 
40- Pérez-Rodríguez, R., Marques, M.J., Bienes, R., 2007. Spatial variability of the soil erodibility parameters and their relation with the soil map at subgroup level. Sci. Total Environ. 378, 166–173.
 
41- Pye, K., 1994. Sediment transport and depositional processes.
 
42- Rengasamy, P., Marchuk, A., 2011. Cation ratio of soil structural stability (CROSS). Soil Res. 49, 280–285.
 
43- Rice, M.A., Willetts, B.B., McEwan, I.K., 1996. Wind erosion of crusted soil sediments. Earth Surf. Process. Landforms 21, 279–293.
44- Richards, L.A., 1954. Diagnosis and improvement of saline and alkali soils. LWW.
 
45- Roney, J.A., White, B.R., 2006. Estimating fugitive dust emission rates using an environmental boundary layer wind tunnel. Atmos. Environ. 40, 7668–7685.
 
46- Shahabinejad, N., Mahmoodabadi, M., Jalalian, A., Chavoshi, E., 2019. In situ field measurement of wind erosion and threshold velocity in relation to soil properties in arid and semiarid environments. Environ. Earth Sci. 78, 501.
 
47- Shao, Y., 2008. Physics and modelling of wind erosion. Springer Science & Business Media.
 
48- Singh, H.V., Thompson, A.M., 2016. Effect of antecedent soil moisture content on soil critical shear stress in agricultural watersheds. Geoderma 262, 165–173.
 
49- Sterk, G., 2003. Causes, consequences and control of wind erosion in Sahelian Africa: a review. L. Degrad. Dev. 14, 95–108.
 
50- Stetler, L.D., Saxton, K.E., 1997. Analysis of wind data used for predicting soil erosion, in: Proceedings of the Wind Erosion: An International Symposium/Workshop. pp. 3–5.
 
51- Van Pelt, R.S., Zobeck, T.M., 2007. Chemical constituents of fugitive dust. Environ. Monit. Assess. 130, 3–16.
 
52- Wiggs, G.F.S., Baird, A.J., Atherton, R.J., 2004. The dynamic effects of moisture on the entrainment and transport of sand by wind. Geomorphology 59, 13–30.
 
53- Zamani, S., Mahmoodabadi, M., 2013. Effect of particle-size distribution on wind erosion rate and soil erodibility. Arch. Agron. Soil Sci. 59, 1743–1753.
 
54- Zhang, D.D., Peart, M., Jim, C.Y., He, Y.Q., Li, B.S., Chen, J.A., 2003. Precipitation chemistry of Lhasa and other remote towns, Tibet. Atmos. Environ. 37, 231–240.
 
55- Zhao, H.-L., Yi, X.-Y., Zhou, R.-L., Zhao, X.-Y., Zhang, T.-H., Drake, S., 2006. Wind erosion and sand accumulation effects on soil properties in Horqin Sandy Farmland, Inner Mongolia. Catena 65, 71–79.
 
56- Ziyaee, A., Karimi, A., Hirmas, D.R., Kehl, M., Lakzian, A., Khademi, H., Mechem, D.B., 2018. Spatial and temporal variations of airborne dust fallout in Khorasan Razavi Province, Northeastern Iran. Geoderma 326, 42–55.
 
57- Zobeck, T.M., Baddock, M., Van Pelt, R.S., Tatarko, J., Acosta-Martinez, V., 2013. Soil property effects on wind erosion of organic soils. Aeolian Res. 10, 43–51.