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Sean Bennett - Geographer
University of Buffalo
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New
Ways to Tame Soil Erosion
BY
JOHN DELLACONTRADA
BUFFALO,
N.Y. (IDN/UB-News) – Dead zones in critical waterways, accelerated
loss of arable land and massive famines. They're all caused by the 24
billion tons of soil that are lost every year to erosion, a phenomenon
that costs the world as much as $40 billion annually.
But predicting where erosion occurs, and thus how to prevent it, is a
serious challenge.
That's why University at Buffalo geographer Sean Bennett has constructed
various systems to model it, with assistance from UB's machine shop. His
methods range from the deceptively low-tech, like simulating rainstorms
over sandboxes to the high-tech, such as the use of particle image
velocimetry (PIV) in large, re-circulating flumes to study how water and
grains of sand interact.
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The purpose of his work is both exceedingly practical -- geared toward helping
farmers learn how to best prevent erosion -- and fundamental, to better
understand how planetary surfaces evolve over time.
"We have feet in two domains," he explains, "we're studying
processes similar to those that created Niagara Falls; at the same time, we're
studying how these processes degrade soil resources worldwide."
The UB research is helping scientists better understand some of the key
triggers of erosion, the complex formation of channels on the landscape,
called rills and gullies.
"Rills and gullies are the dominant erosion processes on agricultural
landscapes today and the main contributor to soil loss," says Bennett,
PhD, UB professor of geography in the College of Arts and Sciences and an
active researcher in the UB 2020 Strategic Strength in Extreme Events.
Rills and gullies also are a primary cause behind excess sediment and
nutrients in waterways, which transports soil and chemicals further
downstream.
Bennett says that these high nutrient loadings of nitrogen and phosphorus from
eroding agricultural areas destroy aquatic resources, causing unmitigated
growth of aquatic algae, depletion of dissolved oxygen and the creation of
"dead zones" in places like the Gulf of Mexico.
Ironically, past research by Bennett demonstrated that when farmers till
fields to remove rills and gullies, they actually end up accelerating erosion.
"Our numerical model showed that you could reduce soil losses by 400
percent if you adopt a no-till farming practice," says Bennett.
"This is because the gullies grow to some maximum size on the landscape
during a growing season. If farmers repair them by tilling the soil each
spring, the practice actually causes much greater soil loss over the long
term."
Bennett's physical model showed similar phenomena.
"Our laboratory landscape showed the same thing," he says,
"rills grow and evolve in time and space, erosional processes get
arrested and reach an endpoint. After that, they don't produce much
sediment."
To model how rills and gullies form, Bennett and his students built a rainfall
soil erosion facility, erecting a 30-foot by 8-foot flume containing eight
tons of soil, which allowed them to monitor their simulated landscape, looking
for disturbances in the soil and the creation of rills and gullies.
Using digital cameras positioned directly above the flume, they developed
digital elevation models of the topography across the flume, at
millimeter-scale accuracy.
"Each set of images represents how the topography evolved at a discrete
space and time during the simulated storm," says Bennett.
The images reveal at what point during the rainfall and runoff, phenomena
called headcuts -- small intense areas of localized erosion -- begin to carve
deep channels into the soil.
"If we can predict where and when these headcuts occur, and develop
technology that allows us to control them, then we can greatly improve soil
resource management," says Bennett.
Such technologies include runoff diversions, grass barriers and vegetated
waterways.
The images also revealed with startling clarity the fractal patterns that the
simulated storm created in the landscape.
"Fractal organization is one of the most compelling ideas in
science," says Bennett."While I always knew that landscapes had
fractal characteristics, I never saw it demonstrated so clearly as when I saw
these treelike patterns in the images we took of our rill networks.
To study sediment transport processes in rivers and how particles interact
with the turbulent flow, Bennett designed a 30-foot by 2-foot flume channel,
which was constructed by the UB machine shop.
In one experiment, the researchers fill the channel with sand and water,
flatten the bed, and then turn on the centrifugal pump to initiate sediment
movement.
"Once the flow reaches a certain velocity, the entire bed erupts into
ripples, created by the instability between the fast-moving fluid overlying
the slow-moving sediment," Bennett explains.
"The PIV system can provide us with high-quality images and data right at
the bed surface while these bedforms are being created," he continues.
"By examining the physics of sediment transport in this way, we can
develop improved models for flow and transport in rivers, allowing us to
better manage our river systems and aquatic ecology."
Bennett hopes to use these flumes and equipment to expand his research on the
interactions between vegetation and river function and form. Such interactions
are critical to the process of restoring and stabilizing degraded streams, a
primary thrust of the National Science Foundation-funded "Ecosystem
Restoration Through Interdisciplinary Exchange" graduate training program
at UB, in which Bennett participates through research and training.
His work is funded by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the National
Science Foundation.
The University at Buffalo is a premier research-intensive public university, a
flagship institution in the State University of New York system and its
largest and most comprehensive campus. UB's more than 28,000 students pursue
their academic interests through more than 300 undergraduate, graduate and
professional degree programs. Founded in 1846, the University at Buffalo is a
member of the Association of American Universities.
(By
arrangement with University at Buffalo/IDN-InDepthNews)
____________________________________
John
DellaContrada is
in-charge of the Office of Media Relations at the University at Buffalo - The
State University of New York.
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