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Inicio  /  Geosciences  /  Vol: 13 Par: 9 (2023)  /  Artículo
ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Soil Erosion in a British Watershed under Climate Change as Predicted Using Convection-Permitting Regional Climate Projections

Rossano Ciampalini    
Elizabeth J. Kendon    
José A. Constantine    
Marcus Schindewolf and Ian R. Hall    

Resumen

Climate change can lead to significant environmental and societal impacts; for example, through increases in the amount and intensity of rainfall with the associated possibility of flooding. Twenty-first-century climate change simulations for Great Britain reveal an increase in heavy precipitation that may lead to widespread soil loss by rising the likelihood of surface runoff. Here, hourly high-resolution rainfall projections from a 1.5 km (?convection-permitting?) regional climate model are used to simulate the soil erosion response for two periods of the century (1996?2009 and a 13-year future period at ~2100) in the ?Rother? catchment, West Sussex, England. Modeling soil erosion with EROSION 3D, we found a general increase in sediment production (off-site erosion) for the end of the century of about 43.2%, with a catchment-average increase from 0.176 to 0.252 t ha-1 y-1 and large differences between areas with diverse land use. These results highlight the effectiveness of using high-resolution rainfall projections to better account for spatial variability in the assessment of long-term soil erosion than other current methods.