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    Mitigating Soil Erosion Caused by Artificial Disturbances in Hilly Lake Environs: Scenario Approach to LID Planning

    Source: Journal of Sustainable Water in the Built Environment:;2018:;Volume ( 004 ):;issue: 001
    Author:
    Tianxiang Yang
    ,
    Shoubing Wang
    ,
    Ming Zhang
    DOI: 10.1061/JSWBAY.0000839
    Abstract: Low-impact development (LID) is crucial to mitigate soil erosion during artificial disturbance in hilly lake environs. However, little research on LID practices focuses on their scenario functions on long-term soil erosion events in macroscopic hilly watersheds, preventing the effective establishment of conservation strategies. Taking the Nanyi Lake region as an example, this paper models the scenario effectiveness of LID under existing framework and evaluates multiple-aspect effectiveness of planning on mitigating soil erosion in hilly lake environs. Based on the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE), primary simulations were conducted on current conditions and the general land-use planning for 2020 to obtain soil loss and net soil loss, respectively. Low-impact development was deployed according to deficiencies of the previous planning and general principles. The function of certain LID methods was modeled via the P-factor in RUSLE concerning its area ratio and the correlation between its performance data and principal components to soil mass. Six indexes were employed to quantify the effect of planning on mitigating current soil erosion issues: the change ratio of annual soil loss, the change ratio of annual net soil loss to water, area ratio of a region with lower soil loss, area ratio of a region with lower net soil loss, Moran’s I of a region with lower soil loss, and Moran’s I of a region with lower net soil loss. Under functionally equivalent framework, these indexes were evaluated as −8.93%, −11.50%, 24.00%, 23.19%, 0.3315, and 0.1856 for the previous planning, and as −19.32%, −41.53%, 48.96%, 40.45%, 0.1045, and 0.0461 for the LID planning. Conclusively, LID deployment would not only reinforce the declining ratio of total soil erosion and sediment yield, but also cause broader and more dispersed patterns under lower impact compared with the previous planning.
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      Mitigating Soil Erosion Caused by Artificial Disturbances in Hilly Lake Environs: Scenario Approach to LID Planning

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4244653
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    contributor authorTianxiang Yang
    contributor authorShoubing Wang
    contributor authorMing Zhang
    date accessioned2017-12-30T13:01:26Z
    date available2017-12-30T13:01:26Z
    date issued2018
    identifier otherJSWBAY.0000839.pdf
    identifier urihttp://138.201.223.254:8080/yetl1/handle/yetl/4244653
    description abstractLow-impact development (LID) is crucial to mitigate soil erosion during artificial disturbance in hilly lake environs. However, little research on LID practices focuses on their scenario functions on long-term soil erosion events in macroscopic hilly watersheds, preventing the effective establishment of conservation strategies. Taking the Nanyi Lake region as an example, this paper models the scenario effectiveness of LID under existing framework and evaluates multiple-aspect effectiveness of planning on mitigating soil erosion in hilly lake environs. Based on the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation (RUSLE), primary simulations were conducted on current conditions and the general land-use planning for 2020 to obtain soil loss and net soil loss, respectively. Low-impact development was deployed according to deficiencies of the previous planning and general principles. The function of certain LID methods was modeled via the P-factor in RUSLE concerning its area ratio and the correlation between its performance data and principal components to soil mass. Six indexes were employed to quantify the effect of planning on mitigating current soil erosion issues: the change ratio of annual soil loss, the change ratio of annual net soil loss to water, area ratio of a region with lower soil loss, area ratio of a region with lower net soil loss, Moran’s I of a region with lower soil loss, and Moran’s I of a region with lower net soil loss. Under functionally equivalent framework, these indexes were evaluated as −8.93%, −11.50%, 24.00%, 23.19%, 0.3315, and 0.1856 for the previous planning, and as −19.32%, −41.53%, 48.96%, 40.45%, 0.1045, and 0.0461 for the LID planning. Conclusively, LID deployment would not only reinforce the declining ratio of total soil erosion and sediment yield, but also cause broader and more dispersed patterns under lower impact compared with the previous planning.
    titleMitigating Soil Erosion Caused by Artificial Disturbances in Hilly Lake Environs: Scenario Approach to LID Planning
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume4
    journal issue1
    journal titleJournal of Sustainable Water in the Built Environment
    identifier doi10.1061/JSWBAY.0000839
    page05017005
    treeJournal of Sustainable Water in the Built Environment:;2018:;Volume ( 004 ):;issue: 001
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
    نرم افزار کتابخانه دیجیتال "دی اسپیس" فارسی شده توسط یابش برای کتابخانه های ایرانی | تماس با یابش
    yabeshDSpacePersian