EFFECTIVE PRECIPTATION, SOIL LOSS AND PLANT COVER SYSTEMS IN THE CAATINGA BIOME, BRAZIL
2016
HELBA ARAÚJO DE QUEIROZ PALÁCIO | JACQUES CARVALHO RIBEIRO FILHO | JÚLIO CÉSAR NEVES DOS SANTOS | EUNICE MAIA DE ANDRADE | JOSÉ BANDEIRA BRASIL
The objective of this work was to evaluate the influence of anthropic activities on the effective precipitation (eP) and soil loss in watersheds under different land uses in a tropical dry forest region. The experimental area was located in the central part of the State of Ceará, Brazil. The land uses evaluated were: fallow Caatinga (FC), thinned Caatinga (TC) and deforested Caatinga followed by a burning procedure and pasture cultivation (DBP). The areas were monitored in the rainy season (January to May, 2010), when 57 natural rainfalls occurred, totaling 941 mm of precipitation. The eP and sediment productions were quantified by the sum of all occurrences during the study period, and the soil loss was represented by suspended and dragged sediments. The eP was 15.13 mm and sediment produced was 167.81 kg ha - 1 in FC conditions. The eP values was smaller (11.28 mm) in the watershed with TC, which had soil loss sum of 42.04 kg ha - 1 . The largest annual eP was found in the DBP area, with 112.88 mm yr - 1 of accumulated water depth, which also showed the greater annual soil loss (3114.97 kg ha - 1 ). The greatest interference of plant cover in the two variables evaluated occurred in the first precipitation events, when the plants were not yet fully developed.
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