Land Degradation by Soil Erosion in Nepal: A Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Land Degradation in Nepal
3. Accelerated Soil Erosion and Its Causes
3.1. Impacts of Land-Use on Erosion
3.2. Impacts of Environmental Factors on Erosion
3.3. Impacts of Management Factors on Erosion
4. Erosion Effects on Nutrient Loss and Crop Productivity
5. Restoration Measures
- Maintaining vegetative cover to minimise direct impacts of raindrops and to impede surface flow [46];
- Improving soil physical conditions to prevent crusting, increase infiltration and reduce surface runoff, and adopting conservation agricultural practices [54];
- Removing excess water overflow through suitable engineering techniques [55]; and
- Following agricultural practices such as terracing so as to reduce slope length [56] to minimise the build-up of surface runoff.
5.1. Manuring and Fertilisation
5.2. Mulching
5.3. Cover Crop Management
5.4. Strip Planting
5.5. Contour Farming
5.6. Conservation Tillage
5.7. Bioengineering Techniques
6. National Initiatives to Cope with Soil Erosion and Land Degradation
7. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Physiographic Regions | Elevation (m) | Common Land Degradation Types |
---|---|---|
High Himalayas | 4000–8848 | Rock slides, an outburst of glacial lakes |
High Mountains | 2000–4000 | Mass wasting, bank cutting, rill, and inter-rill erosion |
Middle Mountains | 1500–2700 | Mass wasting, rill erosion, inter-rill erosion, and bank cutting |
Siwalik Hills | 700–1500 | Rill, inter-rill, and gully erosion |
Terai Plains | 60–700 | Flooding, water logging, sheet erosion, and shifting of river courses leading to streambank erosion |
Types of Land-Use | Total Degraded Land (million ha) | Total Land Area (million ha) | Degraded Land (%) |
---|---|---|---|
Forest | 2.22 | 5.83 | 38.07 |
Pasture/rangeland | 0.65 | 1.75 | 36.97 |
Agriculture (sloping terraces) | 0.29 | 2.97 | 9.77 |
Land-Use | Average Soil Loss (t ha−1 year−1) | Range (t ha−1 year−1) |
---|---|---|
Upland | 28 ± 29 | 2–105 |
Lowland | 0.7 ± 0.9 | 0–2.7 |
Shrub | 58 ± 78 | 0.4–420 |
Forest | 5.1 ± 4.7 | 0.2–15.3 |
Restoration Measures | Study Area and Methods | Key Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Mulching | Maize planting with reduced tillage and rice straw mulching in Kathmandu University | Mulching reduced soil runoff by 18% | Atreya, et al. [43] |
Strip planting | Strip planting with maize and legumes in the Palpa district | Strip crop technologies effective in reducing soil erosion through sieve-barrier effect | Acharya, et al. [61] |
Cover cropping | Planting Napier grass on devastated gully catchment of the Pipaltar, Nuwakot district | Restored soil fertility and recovered the catchment (1995 to 2003) | Higaki, et al. [62] |
Reduced tillage | Maize planting with conventional and reduced tillage practices in Kathmandu University | Compared to conventional tillage, reduced tillage decreased the loss of soil organic carbon, total nitrogen and exchangeable potassium by 62, 7 and 1.4 kg ha−1, respectively | Atreya, et al. [44] |
Maize, cowpea, finger millet and capsicum planting with reduced and conventional tillage practices in the Pokhare Khola watershed | In comparison with conventional tillage, reduced tillage decreased soil erosion and sediment runoff by 23% and 9%, respectively. | Tiwari, et al. [63] | |
Check dams | Planting Dalbergia sisso, Eucalyptus camaldulensis and bamboo along with small check dams in the degraded stream of the Sarlahi district | Stabilised the streams, reduced landslides, and soil erosion over a period of four years (2006 to 2010) | Dhital, et al. [64] |
Use of vegetative and wire net check dams in the Bagmati river basin | Narrowed the flow of stream channels and reduced the river cuttings on the streambanks | Dhital and Tang [65] | |
Hedgerows | Planting hedgerows in the contours in Godavari, Kathmandu | Reduction of soil loss by 80–99% | Ya and Nakarmi [66] |
Hedgerows with intercropping systems to assess the effectiveness of SALT in Godavari, Kathmandu | Hedgerows significantly lowered runoff by 38–43% and soil loss by 72–89%, respectively | Lamichhane [67] |
Plan | Expected Outcomes | Achievements | Shortcomings | Recommendations |
---|---|---|---|---|
8th |
|
| Lack of infrastructures for commercialisation of agriculture | Modification and strengthening of planning process is required |
9th | Community soil conservation service extension to 75 districts | Extended to 55 districts only | No order situation hindered the implementation and budget diverted to the security sector | Necessary to bring hitherto left-out groups into the mainstream, focus on proper mobilisation, allocation, and utilisation of available resources |
10th |
|
| Lack of coordination in the management of community, leasehold, and government-owned forests | A district-level strategic plan should be developed and adequate public participation should be ensured. |
11th | Formation of new CFUGs: 2500 | CFUGs: 15,000 (total up to this plan) | Forest encroachment, soil erosion, forest fires | Formulation of policies focusing on decentralisation and local participation |
12th |
|
| Forest encroachment, soil erosion, forest fires, uncontrolled grazing | Formulation of policies focusing on decentralisation and local participation |
13th | Increase area under forests by at least 40% from 39.6% | Area under forests reached 44.5% | Devastating earthquake (April 2015), forest encroachment, forest fires | Formulation of policies focusing on decentralisation and local participation |
14th | Landslide control on 2000 places, water source conservation in 600 places | Running |
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Chalise, D.; Kumar, L.; Kristiansen, P. Land Degradation by Soil Erosion in Nepal: A Review. Soil Syst. 2019, 3, 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems3010012
Chalise D, Kumar L, Kristiansen P. Land Degradation by Soil Erosion in Nepal: A Review. Soil Systems. 2019; 3(1):12. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems3010012
Chicago/Turabian StyleChalise, Devraj, Lalit Kumar, and Paul Kristiansen. 2019. "Land Degradation by Soil Erosion in Nepal: A Review" Soil Systems 3, no. 1: 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems3010012
APA StyleChalise, D., Kumar, L., & Kristiansen, P. (2019). Land Degradation by Soil Erosion in Nepal: A Review. Soil Systems, 3(1), 12. https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems3010012