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WEELS: Wind Erosion on European Light Soils. EU Framework 5 Research Programme. Partners :. University College London (co-ordination): Andrew Warren, Dave Gasca-Tucker and others - subcontract to. Salford University: Adrian Chappell.
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WEELS: Wind Erosion on European Light Soils EU Framework 5 Research Programme
Partners: University College London(co-ordination): Andrew Warren, Dave Gasca-Tucker and others - subcontract to Salford University: Adrian Chappell Soil Survey of Lower Saxony: Walther Schäfer, Jens Groß, Annette Thiermann, Jan Sbresny - subcontract to Göttingen University(research group geosystem-analysis): Jürgen Böhner, Olaf Conrad, Andre Ringeler, Anke Wehmeyer and others Wageningen University:Jan de Graaf, Wim Spaan, Dirk Goossens, Michel Riksen, Olga Vigiak and Floor Brouwer Lund University:Lars Bärring, Marie Ekström and others
Three Field Sites (“Supersites”) : All on glacial outwash sands, with similar mean annual rainfall; more snow and frost in the east
Main Elements:: • The WEELS model, running with data on wind, temperature, rainfall, soil erodibility and land use • Validation: • (a) against a few “event records” in Grönheim and Barnham (b) against estimates of erosion based on the use of 137Cs, for Barnham only • Development of a risk-assessment system, for use where there are fewer data, for Grönheim • Sand and dust monitoring • Climate change scenarios • Economic and policy analysis
The WEELS Model:: Jürgen Böhner, Walther Schäfer, Olaf Conrad, Jens Groß and Andre Ringeler Choices: Wind-Erosion Equation (WEQ) Revised Wind Erosion Equation (RWEQ) Wind Erosion Prediction System (WEPS) The WEELS Model - developed from EROKLI (Beinhauer and Kruse, 1994)
Components of the WEELS Model (1) WIND: WAsP (Wind Atlas Analysis and Application Program) used to convert hourly wind observations at a meteorological station to values across the supersite according to variation in topography and roughness. WIND EROSIVITY:Several elements, mainly shear velocity U* and mass transport SOIL MOISTURE: The water content of the top 2 cm of soil layer, calculated with a simple model using standard meteorological data
Components of the WEELS Model (2) SOIL ERODIBILITY: Essentially, the dimensionless soil erodibility factor‚ ‘K’, depending on aggregate structure and derived from wind tunnel studies, and regressions against soil factors, such as texture and organic matter content. SURFACE ROUGHNESS: soil roughness: aggregate size and tillage (from empirical data, with big assumptions) vegetation roughness: crop type and crop phenology
LAND USE: Coverage for 1985 (no data brown) Data + simulation for 1985 Components of the WEELS Model (3) Michel Riksen, David Gasca-Tucker, Olaf Conrad and others
Reduction of Friction Velocities Windbreak Modelling Olga Vigiak and Annette Thiermann
Output: • Hourly assessment of mean wind speed (10 m above ground) and friction velocity • Daily assessments of crop cover, tillage roughness and top soil moisture • Hourly duration of erosive conditions • Maximum sediment transport rate, calculated with and without top-soil moisture • A simplified daily erosion/accumulation balance.
Events: • Events recorded during field monitoring: about two at the monitoring site • Events recorded by farmers: mostly rather inaccurate, but one very well recorded event on video: see later
137Caesium Analysis Adrian Chappell • Direct measurement is difficult mainly because it is very episodic (as we found) • 137Cs is an artificial isotope created in nuclear reactions, as in bombs and nuclear power stations (cf Chernobyl) • Output to the atmosphere reached a peak in the mid 1960s, so that one is measuring net erosion over about 35 years • It is now widely used to measure erosion. It is simple, but time-consuming to measure
Caesium Mass-Balance Model • An existing model (Owens 1994) was modified to include the major factors controlling wind erosion: Land cover and phenology (including plough events) Rainfall to estimate daily 137Cs fallout Wind speed and a fuzzy threshold (5-7 m s-1) for erosion • Erosion and deposition models are for each field and each day
Sediment Transport Sampling Dirk Goossens and Jens Groß • Testing sediment samplers (the now widely used MWAC sampler found to be best by many criteria • Very detailed recording of one of the few events on 18 May 1999
Wind Erosion and Climate Change Lars Bärring, Marie Ekström and others
For Example: Benefits in €/ha Economics Michel Riksen, Jan de Graaf, and Floor Brouwer
Circulation Pattern over Europe 13.03.1994 Some Results: Event Modelling, Barnham
Wind Speed [10 m a.G.] Honington Some Results: Event Modelling - Barnham Erosion/Accumulation Balance (12.03. - 15.03.1994)
Erosion/Accumulation Balance: -1.5 to 1.8 Kg/m² Some Results: Longterm Estimation (1970-98)
Cs-derived estimates: soil flux(Adrian Chappell) Top of scale 0.45 gain; bottom of scale 0.35 erosion (g cm2yr -1) Some Results: Cs-derived Estimates • Net loss: • 0.6 t ha-1 yr-1 • Area of erosion • deposition • Rate of erosion • deposition
Model vs Measurements • Crude comparison of the distribution of “measured” as against “modelled” erosion shows similar patterns, with erosion concentrated in the north- east of the site, but • Model estimates: - 1.56 t ha-1 yr-1 vs • 137Cs Method: - 0.60 t ha-1 yr-1 • Most models overpredict, but • The disparity is even greater if we acknowledge removal on root crops (2.4 t ha-1 per crop).