Direct and indirect effects of rainfall and vegetation coverage on
runoff, soil loss, and nutrient loss
Abstract
High nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) levels are the main causes of
eutrophication of water bodies, and the chemical oxygen demand (COD) is
one of the indices of relative organic matter content. Several simulated
rainfall experiments have been conducted to investigate the effects of a
single controlling factor on soil and nutrient loss. However, the role
of precipitation and vegetation coverage in quantifying soil and
nutrient loss is still unclear. We monitored runoff, soil loss, and soil
nutrient loss under natural rainfall conditions from 2004 to 2015 in
runoff plots around Beijing. Soil erosion was significantly reduced when
vegetation coverage reached 20 and 60%. At levels below 30%, nutrient
loss did not differ among different vegetation cover levels. Minimum
soil N and P losses were observed at cover levels above 60%.
Irrespective of the management measure, soil nutrient losses were higher
at high-intensity rainfall events compared to low-intensity events (p
< 0.05). We applied structural equation modelling (SEM) to
systematically analyze the relative effects of rainfall characteristics
and environmental factors on runoff, soil loss, and soil nutrient loss.
At high-intensity rainfall events, neither vegetation cover nor
antecedent soil moisture content (ASMC) affected runoff and soil loss.
After log-transformation, soil nutrient loss was significantly linearly
correlated with runoff and soil loss (p < 0.01). In addition,
we identified the direct and indirect relationships among the
influencing factors of soil nutrient loss on runoff plots and
constructed a structural diagram of these relationships. The factors
positively impacting soil nutrient loss were runoff (44-48%), maximum
rainfall intensity over a 30-min period (18-29%), rainfall depth
(20-27%), and soil loss (10-14%). Studying the effects of rainfall and
vegetation coverage factors on runoff, soil loss, and nutrient loss can
improve our understanding of the underlying mechanism of slope non-point
source pollution.