Advances in Soil Erosion and Ecological Restoration
A special issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (ISSN 1660-4601). This special issue belongs to the section "Environmental Earth Science and Medical Geology".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (6 April 2023) | Viewed by 14389
Special Issue Editors
Interests: water erosion process and mechanism; ecological control of soil erosion; soil erosion and vegetation; soil erosion and carbon sequestration; sustainable agriculture of hilly region
Interests: sediment sources; rural nonpoint source pollution; improvement of cultivated land quality; monitoring of agricultural small watershed; source-sink landscape; climate change
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Soil erosion leads to soil degradation, reduces land productivity, and affects agricultural production and food security. In addition, the pollutants transported with runoff and sediment have serious impacts on the ecological environment and socio-economic development of the adjacent areas in the erosion zone, causing the eutrophication of water bodies; the destruction of plant, animal and microorganism habitats; and the intensification of droughts and floods in the downstream areas of erosion. Meanwhile, the transport of eroded sediments changes the content and components of soil carbon, nitrogen and phosphorus, which in turn affects the global element cycles. Thus, soil erosion becomes one of the important driving factors of global climate change. The prevention and control of soil erosion has become an important environmental issue related to the survival and development of human beings. Soil and water conservation measures can prevent soil erosion, protect and reasonably use soil and water resources, and maintain and improve land productivity, in order to establish a healthy, rich, and diverse ecological environment. Finally, due to the current context of climate change and the frequent occurrence of extreme climate, soil erosion is expected to appear in new forms in the future, and it is necessary to study soil erosion systematically with a global perspective and long-term vision. Soil erosion is complex, and there are many types, affecting people’s health and ecological environment in different ways. New measures are needed to combine new policies for prevention and treatment in order to promote sustainable socio-economic development.
This Special Issue of International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (IJERPH) focuses on the current state of knowledge on the links between soil erosion and environmental development. New research papers, reviews, case reports and conference papers are welcome to this Issue. Other accepted manuscript types include methodological papers, position papers, brief reports, and commentaries.
We will accept manuscripts from different disciplines, including but not limited to soil erosion and ecological restoration, soil and water conservation, and erosion assessment and modeling.
Some topics of interest for this Special Issue include:
- Extreme climate events and soil erosion response;
- New runoff–sediment relations under changed environment;
- New technologies for soil erosion management;
- Soil erosion and food security;
- Soil erosion and material cycle;
- Soil erosion management and carbon sequestration;
- Regional adaptable soil erosion models;
- Agricultural non-point-source pollution control;
- Ecological restoration and ecosystem services;
- Cultivated land quality protection and promotion strategy.
Dr. Yaojun Liu
Dr. Fangxin Chen
Dr. Yusong Deng
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- soil erosion
- ecological restoration
- soil and water conservation
- erosion assessment and modeling
- agricultural non-point source pollution control
- cultivated land quality protection and promotion strategy
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