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A Geoinformatics Approach to Water Erosion : Soil Loss and Beyond / by Tal Svoray.

Springer eBooks EBA - Earth & Environmental Science Collection 2022 Available online

Springer eBooks EBA - Earth & Environmental Science Collection 2022
Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Svoray, Tal, author.
Series:
Earth and Environmental Science Series
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Soil science.
Geographic information systems.
Earth sciences.
Physical geography.
Soil Science.
Geographical Information System.
Earth Sciences.
Physical Geography.
Local Subjects:
Soil Science.
Geographical Information System.
Earth Sciences.
Physical Geography.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (364 pages)
Edition:
1st ed. 2022.
Place of Publication:
Cham : Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Springer, 2022.
Summary:
Degradation of agricultural catchments due to water erosion is a major environmental threat at the global scale, with long-lasting destructive consequences valued at tens of billions of dollars per annum. Eroded soils lead to reduced crop yields and deprived agroecosystem’s functioning through, for example, decreased water holding capacity, poor aeration, scarce microbial activity, and loose soil structure. This can result in reduced carbon sequestration, limited nutrient cycling, contamination of water bodies due to eutrophication, low protection from floods and poor attention restoration—consequences that go far beyond the commonly modelled soil loss and deposition budgets. This book demonstrates, using data from the Harod catchment in northern Israel, how cutting-edge geoinformatics, data science methodologies and soil health indicators can be used to measure, predict, and regulate these major environmental hazards. It shows how these approaches are used to quantify—in timeand space—the effect of water erosion not only on the soil layer, soil minerals, and soil loss, but also on the wide-range of services that agricultural ecosystems might supply for the benefit and well-being of humans. The algorithms described in this book play a major role in this paradigm shift and they include, for example, extraction of photogrammetric DEMs from drone's data, advanced drainage structure calculations, fuzzy process-based modelling and spatial topographic threshold computations, multicriteria analyses and expert-based systems development using analytic hierarchal processes, innovative data-mining and machine learning tools, autocorrelation and interpolation of soil health, physically-based soil evolution models, spatial decision support systems and many more.
Contents:
Dedication
Preface
Acknowledgement
1. Soil erosion: The general problem
1.1 The soil, and its erosion
1.2 Scope of soil erosion
1.3 A brief history of soil loss
1.4 Soil as a finite resource
1.5 Summary
2 The case of agricultural catchments
2.1 Erosion factors in a distinct landform
2.2 On-site and off-site consequences
2.3 The human agent
2.4 Summary
3 The physical process
3.1 The basics of hillslope erosion
3.2 Water Erosion Prediction Project (WEPP)
3.3 CAESAR-Lisflood a landscape evolution model
3.4 Morgan-Morgan-Finney (MMF)
3.5 Summary
4 Spatial variation in the catchment
4.1 Discrete spatial units
4.2 A suite of continuous variables
4.3 Summary
5 Earth-based observations
5.1 Spectral indices: spectral signatures and mathematical expressions
5.2 Classification
5.3 Synergy of RS data in catchment models
5.4 Close range analysis
5.5 Summary
6 Predicting erosion risk: from expert knowledge to data mining
6.1 The Topographic Threshold
6.2 Expert-based systems
6.3 The data-mining approach
6.4 Fuzzy logic
6.5 Summary
7 Health of the remaining soil
7.1 The soil health index
7.2 Statistical analysis and pre-processing
7.3 Mapping soil health
7.4 Summary
8 Decision-making
8.1 Decision-making in soil conservation
8.2 The simple expert system
8.3 GISCAME
8.4 Summary
References
Index
Nomenclature.
Notes:
Includes index.
Other Format:
Print version: Svoray, Tal A Geoinformatics Approach to Water Erosion
ISBN:
9783030915360
OCLC:
1298513718

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