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Land Degradation & Development

Publication date: 2015-01-01
Volume: 26 Pages: 35 - 44
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Author:

Monsieurs, Elise
Dessie, Mekete ; Adgo, Enyew ; Poesen, Jean ; Deckers, Seppe ; Verhoest, Niko ; Nyssen, Jan

Keywords:

drainage ditch, cut-off drain, runoff, ephemeral gully, soil saturation, rill, stone bund, Science & Technology, Life Sciences & Biomedicine, Environmental Sciences, Soil Science, Environmental Sciences & Ecology, Agriculture, LAKE TANA BASIN, CONCENTRATED FLOW EROSION, EPHEMERAL GULLY EROSION, SOIL-EROSION, ETHIOPIAN HIGHLANDS, LAND-USE, CULTIVATED CATCHMENTS, NORTHERN ETHIOPIA, CLAY SOILS, BLUE NILE, 03 Chemical Sciences, 04 Earth Sciences, 05 Environmental Sciences, Agronomy & Agriculture, 3709 Physical geography and environmental geoscience, 4104 Environmental management

Abstract:

The combination of runoff-generating areas (saturated soils) and overland flow concentration in features such as drainage ditches makes sloping farmland vulnerable to soil erosion. The establishment of drainage ditches aims at draining the excess of water from the farmland, particularly in areas where soils are saturated in the rainy season. The hydrogeomorphic impacts on the farmland itself and on downstream areas need however also to be studied. Off site, downstream problems comprise higher peak discharges, leading to gully initiation, an increase in sediment load, and flooding problems. On-site problems such as the development of the drainage ditches into (ephemeral) gullies are less documented, although they may be important, as illustrated in the Lake Tana Basin (Ethiopia). The similarities and interactions between ephemeral gully channels and drainage ditches have to be considered to better understand all effects of drainage. Drainage ditches are a potential source of conflict between farmers with different interests and power, as well as between upstream and downstream users. A case study on drainage ditches on sloping farmlands in the Lake Tana Basin showed that nine out of ten catchments had drainage densities by ditches ranging from 53 to 510mha-1. Drainage ditches were constructed with an average top width of 27 (±9) cm. A significant correlation was found between stone bund density (physical conservation structures) and ditch drainage density (R =-0·72), in line with the Ethiopian government’s ban on drainage ditches in farmlands where stone bunds have been constructed