1. Introduction
Splash erosion is the process of detachment of soil particles due to the impact of falling raindrops, and the deposit of those particles on adjacent sites [
1,
2,
3]. Splash erosion is the first mechanism of soil erosion, and it is the one that produces most of the detachment work [
4], and it affects other processes, such as infiltration [
5], soil water repellency [
6], overland flow [
7], roughness [
8], and the final soil erosion rates [
9], as it changes the soil surface characteristics. The splash erosion process initiates movements that are concentrated at the surface and it affects the composition of the material on the soil, such as minerals and organic particles [
10]. As a result, the transported material could be even rich in organic carbon [
11], with splash erosion being one of the key factors that are responsible for the redistribution of the minerals on the soil surface [
12]; however, the microtopography should be also considered as the key factor for soil erosion on small scales [
13,
14].
In arid and semi-arid areas, splash erosion also plays a major role in forming the landscape due to the control that exerts on shaping the landforms [
15,
16]. This is because the bare soils allow for the raindrop impact to develop a crust, and then to enhance surface runoff generation, which is a key process in the Mediterranean and temperate areas, such as Spain [
17], Italy [
18,
19], Israel [
20], or Iran [
21]. The kinetic energy of the raindrops is responsible for breaking up soil aggregates and finer materials, such as fine sand, silt, clay, and organic particles that are detached by raindrops are carried away by runoff, leaving larger sand grains, pebbles, and gravel behind [
22]. On a flat surface, the fine particles may clog up pores and facilitate ponding [
23]. However, if the area is on a steep slope, the water that did not infiltrate may flow downslope as sheet erosion [
24,
25], carrying the soil particles that have been loosened by the raindrop impacts away [
26]. Hills and ridges that are shaped by splash erosion use tend to have gently rounded tops that are very different from the sharper profiles that are created by other forms of water erosion [
27].
Research in erosion processes is time-consuming and expensive [
28]. To be effective, the erosion measurements should be precise, controlled, and replicable, and erosion measurement devices should be properly designed, constructed, well calibrated, and they also should be operated by a trained researcher or technician to assure effectiveness, [
29]. The equipment is constantly redesigned, making the measurements not comparable and furthermore, creating a lack of available standardized devices because researchers try to improve old devices [
30]. This lack of standardization is especially important in the case of splash erosion, as it is, by nature, a complex mechanism that is key for understanding soil erosion processes [
31]. Moreover, it is very difficult to isolate the measurements of splash erosion from those of sheet and rill surface erosion since they all interact [
32]. In general, soil erosion rates that are measured under simulated and natural rainfall by means of plots, erosion pins, silt fences, or flumes [
33,
34] can measure the soil erosion processes, but they cannot detect the individual mechanisms: splash, sheet surface wash, and rill flow. The information that is generated from experiments that separate individual soil erosion mechanisms, such as the one developed here, will be very effective in producing soil erosion models to foresee the soil loss changes in time and space.
There are many different types of devices that claim to measure splash erosion, and the number increases due to the contribution of new ideas. The objective of these changes in the designs are improving the sensitivity of the device with a little amount of splash erosion or changes in erosivity and precision shown in the standard deviation of the measurements under the same conditions [
3]. However, all of the designs show important measurement limitations, which are yet to be well quantified. As a result, the research on splash erosion involves a high variability that is related to the different locations of the studies (i.e., soil and weather characteristics) and the different devices used for measurement (different design for reception and accumulation of the sample), which makes any comparison very difficult.
Within the devices that are used to characterize splash erosion, the first classification that can be made is whether the device is unbounded or bounded, depending on which surface the splashed sediment originates [
3]. Bounded devices have a specific surface that is used to assess the soil erodibility, while the unbounded devices measure the amount of sediment that is received in the form of splashed sediment from the (unbounded) surrounding area. The unbounded devices that were selected for this study were: the funnel [
35], the cup [
36,
37], and the gutter [
38]. Another unbounded device, the tower of funnels, was also included in this research, although it has never been used before due to the different structure and data that can be obtained. All of the unbounded devices only measure a cumulative amount of splashed sediment (g) over the total measuring period, originated from an unknown area, which means that no traditional rate of splash (g m
−2) can be determined. For the bounded devices, the most common devices selected were the Tübingen cup (Tcup) [
9,
39] and the Morgan tray [
40,
41], which allow for calculating the quantitative splash rates, because the amount of sediment can be related to a known surface.
Our hypothesis is that the measurements of the splash erosion that were obtained with any of these devices should be related by an equation to enable a good comparison of the data obtained with different splash erosion device. The main goal of this research was to compare the measurements that were obtained with six different splash erosion devices (using the same soil, slope angle, and rain characteristics), and to try to propose a relation among the obtained data that is able to help to make the results of earlier and new research comparable. Additionally, this study aims to describe the specific problems that a researcher needs to take into account when dealing with splash erosion, while paying special attention to the sensitivity, the cost, and the user-friendliness of the device.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Description of Selected Splash Devices
The selection of splash devices for this study intends to provide a wide representation of the main types of splash systems that are commonly used (
Figure 1). Starting with the unbounded area devices, the splash cup (
Figure 1a) is currently one of the most common devices to measure splash erosion [
3]. It consists of an aluminium or PVC cylinder with a paper filter at 2 cm from the upper edge, placed between a metal mesh, which is fixed, and a coarser mesh on top of it. This cylinder has a standing height of 7 cm and a diameter of 10 cm, and the lower part is cut open to allow for runoff to flow freely underneath the cup. It is inserted in the ground until only 3 cm protrudes. When empty, this device usually acts as a receptor, but it could also be used to estimate erosion when it is initially filled with a known quantity of soil and the remaining amount of soil after the rain impact is measured [
42]. It has a measuring area of 0.0079 m
2.
The funnel device (
Figure 1b) was specifically designed for minimizing the loss of particles that were already accumulated within the device by the washing out caused by raindrops that fall inside the device after the deposit of some particles [
35]. It consists of a couple of piled-up funnels, with a filter paper in between that should be weighed before and after the rainfall event. The diameter of funnels is 12 cm, and they are inserted in the ground until only 3 cm protrudes. It has a measurement surface of 0.0095 m
2.
The collection pipe or gutter [
38] is a plastic gutter (
Figure 1c) of 5.95 m long and 6.5 cm width with the upper part open, at a height of 3 cm, from the soil surface. This gutter is installed across the studied area and it allows for collecting the splashed soil particles in the lower part by filtering the water. It has a measurement area of 0.37 m
2.
The tower of funnels (
Figure 1d) was designed for this experiment as a device that enables the determination of the vertical transport of splash erosion. This system or the Leguédois tray only obtain this information [
43]. 13 funnels that are attached to a vertical bar with an angle of 45 degrees, and the lower funnel at 7.5 cm from the surface form it. There is a filter paper inside each funnel. Each of the 13 funnels has an area of 0.011 m
2.
In the group of bounded area, the Morgan tray and the Tübingen cup are the devices. The Morgan tray [
44] collects all of the soil splashed from a well-defined eroding area, allowing for the calculation of the splash rate. This device (
Figure 1e) consists of a 10 cm diameter cylinder that was placed directly on the soil, which is surrounded by plastic and closed circular plate of 30 cm in diameter. Raindrops impacting the bare soil surface in the inner circle detached soil particles, and later they jump over the rim and fall on the outer circle. The outer rim of the tray has a wall of 20 cm height to avoid the contamination of splashed material from the outside soil. The device has a source area of soil to be eroded of 0.0079 m
2.
The Tübingen cup or Tcup [
45] consists of a plastic flask that is filled with a known quantity of sand of 212.50 μm with a carrier system attached (
Figure 1f). It measures the difference in weight of the sand before and after the rain, and therefore measures the splash erosion that is generated by the applied rainfall for a given particle size of quartz. A silk cover separates the flask and the carrier systems, which prevents the loss of sand and guarantees free drainage of water between the cup and the carrier. It does not estimate splash erosion rates of natural soil because it only measures the loss of sand. Nevertheless, the measurement of this sand can be related somehow to the raindrop impact on the soil or to the kinetic energy affecting the area. It has a source measuring area of 0.002 m
2.
2.2. The Wageningen Rainfall Simulator
The rainfall simulator of Wageningen University and Research consists of a 6 m long and 2.5 m wide plot, with a 2.8 m high metal lateral frame (
Figure 2). The rainfall is produced from two mobile central nozzles that are situated at 3.5 m height. The slope that can be adapted from 0 to 15.5° was fixed at 10° for this study. The bottom is freely drained and it is subdivided into six segments, which were covered by a permeable geotextile to allow infiltration. The plot was filled with air-dried sand 369 μm in diameter, which allows for a very constant infiltration (mini-disk infiltrometer tests done on 10 different positions showed an average value of K = 0.024 cm s
−1 with a standard deviation of 0.0014) and can act as a homogenous soil source that can be splashed. The sides were covered with a plastic curtain, and a tube along the sides of the plot was installed to collect water that was dripping from the curtains.
Lassu et al. [
46] extensively described the characteristics of this rainfall simulator, which is regulated by changing the pressure of the pump, the flow of the water, and the type of nozzles. In their study, Lassu et al. [
46] selected two Lechler nozzles (nr. 460.788 and nr. 461.008) to produce low and high-intensity rainfall, respectively, and a pressure of 2 bars as the best conditions to work with the Wageningen simulator. Their results showed rainfall characteristics that were steady in time and reproducible. Moreover, they also found that the intensity of the rainfall slightly varies along the area, and the position of the nozzles, which is crucial for the spatial distribution of the rainfall, concentrating higher intensities under the nozzles, and lower intensities on both sides (
Figure 3). The size and speed of the raindrops that were produced by the Wageningen rainfall simulator were measured using a disdrometer Thies Laser Precipitation Monitor to determine that intensities from 38 to 160 mm/h produce steadily kinetic energy values from 25.7 to 29 J m
−2 mm
−1. In the current study, we reproduced exactly the same conditions that in this above-mentioned research (pressure, position of the nozzles and slope), also measuring very similar intensities (60–160 mm/h with only one measurement done at 172 mm h
−1), which allows for us to assume that the kinetic energy values of a hypothetical study area under extreme rainfall conditions. This will allow for obtaining the maximum potential of each studied device.
Additionally, it is important to remember that fixing a value of pressure, water flow, and specific nozzle, in this simulator, there will be one value of kinetic energy that is related to each value of intensity, because the drop size distribution (DSD) will be constant under such conditions. Drop size distribution represents the number of drops that are measured as a function of diameter in one sample [
47]. This is different in the natural rain, where it is possible to obtain different kinetic energies from the same intensity due to the different DSD of rains that were more convective or stratiform [
37,
48].
The Wageningen rainfall simulator is very sensitive to small changes in the flow, so the intensity values in every specific experimental spot of the area were checked before and during every simulation. Additionally, a modification of the Christiansen Uniformity Coefficient (CUC) was used to assign a value of intensity to every point of the rainfall simulator area. This is a commonly used statistic for the evaluation of sprinkling systems, and a value of 80 is usually considered to be acceptable in sprinkling systems [
49]. It can be calculated with Equation (1).
where
CUC is the Christiansen’s Uniformity Coefficient (%),
Xi is the depth (mm) or the mass of water precipitated in each collector (g),
is the mean depth (mm) precipitated in the collectors, and
n is the number of collecting container.
This method consists on recovering the rainfall of 10 min. with rain gauges being installed every 40 cm (96 containers along the area), obtaining the intensity in every point (
Figure 3), and only in the experimental positions (places where the splash devices were settled), obtaining a mean value of uniformity of 78.9. This value was used as a reference to set the experimental spots in the experiments. However, in any case, the values of rainfall intensity in every experimental spot were measured prior using each splash device. The goal was to confirm the stability of the parameters of the simulated rainfall in these specific spots between different experiments with the rainfall simulator that is characterized by the same flux, pressure, position of the nozzles, and inclination. We measure a value directly related to the kinetic energy because the artificial drops produced by the rainfall simulator will show the same DSD and speed. The reason is that there will be one unique value of kinetic energy for each value of intensity if the rest of the parameters of the rainfall simulator stay constant (flux, pressure, the position of nozzles, and slope).
2.3. Experimental Design
The measurement of the intensity of the rain in every experimental spot before each splash-measurement was considered as one of the most important steps as the aim of this study is to compare splash devices performance. Assuring the same rainfall intensity value, no matter what the intensity value is, compared all of the used devices. Additionally, we rely on the hypothesis that a certain relationship exists between rainfall intensity and the amount of splash that is recovered by each splash erosion device; therefore, this relationship will be shown in the results that are obtained with different devices.
Accordingly, the first important step was to install a set of six splash devices of the same type in well-defined positions of the rainfall simulator area (
Figure 3) and to assign a rainfall intensity value to each position. We set containers in the six positions of the devices, and measured the intensities among repetitions, previously, to assure the stability of the rainfall intensity values prior to conducting each rainfall simulation. In the case of the gutter device, because of its different design, the determination of the rain intensity was done by measuring all the squared area with the gauges while taking into account that this area was situated at the same positions of the other devices (
Figure 3). The difference in the area has been taken into account and the gutter results have been independently analysed. After 10 min of simulated rain, the splashed soil was collected from each device to evaluate the differences among the measurements. The distance between devices was always larger than 1 m to avoid interferences between them following the recommendations of Geißler et al. [
39].
2.4. Comparison of Measurements
The experiments were repeated under controlled conditions, conducting at least 30 measurements with each device in order to compare the device measurements (
Table 1), only varying the intensity of simulated rainfall values that were measured prior conducting each experiment in every spot. The measurements are organized in classes of 5 mm/h each, the average and deviation of splash erosion recovered in each interval of the intensity of rain can be also seen in
Figure 4 (left graph).
The data that were recovered from the devices were analysed and compared based on their sensitivity and reproducibility, following the methodology that was proposed by Thomsen et al. [
50]. The sensitivity is related to the response of the device to changes in the rainfall intensity. The reproducibility compares the results that were obtained with each device after several simulations using the same intensity. It is important to keep in mind that only the devices operating in a similar way can be directly compared. Accordingly, unbounded devices are compared first and bounded ones afterwards.
It is still possible to obtain the same units (g m−2) with both types of devices, being conscious of the difference in the performance of bounded and unbounded devices. Obviously, the same units do not represent the same physical process, but they allow for comparing the relation that they have with the changes in intensity.
The design of the bounded devices is generally divided into two parts: one inside, with a certain amount of soil susceptible of being eroded, and one outside, with a deposit to collect the splashed soil. This means that the soil that is collected in the outside area will come from the inner deposit, and absolutely all of the soil moved from the inside deposit to the outside deposit will be measured. Accordingly, the soil lost from the inner deposit (g), divided by the area of this deposit (less than 0.01 m2, depending on the device), represents the splash rate (g m−2).
In the unbounded devices, as it was explained in the introduction, the calculation of the splash rate is not possible. The soil source area is not precisely established (it is not possible to know the origin of the soil collected), and the devices will not collect a lot of mobilized splash sediment from this undefined area. However, to give the same units of bounded ones, the number of sediments collected in each unbounded device can be divided by its collection area. In both kinds of devices, an increase in the rain intensity should be logically related to an increase in the soil mobilized per area. However, it should be taken into account that the sample that was collected by an unbounded device will be much less than in the bounded one, which collects all of the mobilized soil.
In conclusion, the amount of splashed soil measured are very different, always being bigger in the bounded devices, but the relationship between splash and intensity of rain should be positive in both types, because both types of devices are measuring differently. These differences in absolute values should be not a problem for conducting statistical analysis, because both types of measurements are calculated while using the same units (g m−2). However, this issue should be considered during the interpretation of the results, and the comparison of bounded and unbounded devices. Additionally, even while taking into account the different capacity that those devices have in recovering splashed soil, we have the possibility to compare the data by calculating the standard score or typifying data, by extracting the mean score from each score and dividing the result by the standard deviation.
Additionally, to study the consistency of the response of the studied devices under different rainfall intensities, the splash rate that was obtained with each splash device was also divided by the rainfall intensity used in each experiment in g h m
−2 mm
−1 relating a splash rate per mm of rain.
Table 2 shows the average obtained with all of the repetitions of the six types of devices used in the experiments.
The normal distribution of data was checked using the Shapiro–Wilk test. Parametric statistics and tests were used, as the null hypothesis was not rejected in most cases. Pearson’s correlation coefficients were used to analyse possible linear relations between devices as well as Spearman’s in the cases of non-parametrical distributions (
Table 2). With these tests, we may confirm the linear relation between the compared data, although these analyses cannot measure the relationships in the data. To assess these relations, it is necessary a test that usually needs data that can be used as a reference of the real values, but, in this case, it is not known which data should be used as a reference device. Therefore, it was necessary to use the Bland–Altman plot test that is designed for a comparison between methods when it is not possible to know the reference base method. The Bland–Altman plot test defines the intervals of agreement within which 95% of the differences of a method fall as compared to another one. It does not confirm whether those limits are acceptable or not. Moreover, a regression analysis was conducted while using the rainfall intensity and each studied device as parameters. If the devices react with the intensity of the rain, some relation should be found, and if the devices correctly measured the splash erosion, some relation should be found with the results taken by several devices.
Finally, a qualitative analysis comparing the cost, the installation limitations, soil collection, and any extra information given by each splash device was also done by means of the Leopold matrix that is commonly used for the selection of methodologies and decision making [
51,
52].
5. Conclusions and Future Recommendations
In this study, we compared six different devices that were designed to measure splash erosion. The analysis of the devices shows that the funnel and the cup are the best devices because of their functionality, which includes low-cost, easy installation, sampling, and the information that they provide. However, only the funnel shows a significant relation with the rain intensity. This can be related to the design of the funnel device that prevents the loss of sample by washing. For all of these reasons, the use of the funnel is highly recommended to estimate splash erosion. However, the use of the Tcup is advised to measure the kinetic energy of the rainfall, because it is a contrasting method, which can be used in isolated places as well as being very easy to transport and cost-effective. The Morgan tray and the tower of funnels present a more complex use and demand more work to collect the samples than the others do; however, the acquired data provide information about distance and potential erosivity power of the rain to move natural soil, which other methods do not provide.
The height that splash erosion is able to reach can be detected with the tower of funnels; however, this method does not properly measure the splashed soil and it should only be used as a complement of other devices, such as the funnel.
Another interesting conclusion is that the researcher should decide in advance whether the calculation of a splash rate is necessary for his or her research, selecting a bounded splash device if this is indeed needed. Unfortunately, in this study, it was not possible to establish a relation between the different splash devices, because of the high variability and low agreement of the results. For future research in splash erosion, the recommendation is to exclusively make comparisons with studies that use the same methodology, because the transformation of the results from one device to another is uncertain and the comparison is unclear.