Dissertação
Perdas de água e sedimento em bacias pareadas de ordem zero sob plantio direto com e sem terraço
Fecha
2015-07-28Registro en:
LONDERO, Ana Lúcia. Water and sediment loss in bowls order paired zero under direct planting with and without terrace. 2015. 156 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Agronomia) - Universidade Federal de Santa Maria, Santa Maria, 2015.
Autor
Londero, Ana Lúcia
Institución
Resumen
Tillage is a conservation technique for soil management, whose principles are avoiding soil
disturbance, straw maintenance on the surface and crop rotation. Currently, negligence in its
use leads to situations of land degradation. Little is known about the hydrological and erosive
dynamic in slopes and zero-order basins. The study monitored water and soil loss in mishandled
tillage systems in the scope of paired basins of order zero, with and without mechanical
practices for runoff control. The plots are located in FEPAGRO Semente s experimental area in
the city of Julio de Castilhos, RS Central region. The basin area without mechanical practices
is 2.34 ha and with mechanical conservation practices in the form of terraces of 2.43 ha.
Rainfall, flow and sediment concentration were monitored during major rainfall events that
occurred between the periods of July 2014 to March 2015. The data was analyzed to understand
the dynamics of water infiltration and formation of runoff in two ways: comparison of total
losses of water and sediment between events, and the comparison of the hydrograph and
sedimentograph of a same event between basins. The results demonstrate that the basins are
highly responsive to the precipitation and that sediment production is exhausted in the duration
of each event. The tillage system without mechanical practice could not contain the superficial
runoff whereas in the basin where mechanical practices were used such losses were greatly
reduced. For rainfall of larger magnitudes, flow rates were heightened, indicating high sediment
production capacity. In the bowl with mechanical practice, construction of terraces resulted in
flow rates with higher concentrations of sediment, but did not cause a higher amount of total
sediments due to the low volume drained. Soil losses were significant for larger events and with
low ground cover.