The historical Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) is often adopted to predict
2021
The historical Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) is often adopted to predict
- A.
Annual soil loss in tonnes/ha
- B.
Event based soil erosion rates
- C.
Sedimentograph
- D.
Land degradation Index
Attempted by 20 students.
Show answer & explanation
Correct answer: A
Concept
The Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) is an empirical model A = R·K·L·S·C·P. It is built from long-term field-plot data and estimates A, the soil loss averaged over many years, expressed as a mass of soil lost per unit area per year (for example, tonnes per hectare per year). It is a long-term average estimator, not a model of any single storm.
Application
Reading the equation against the question: A is defined as the average annual soil loss per unit area. So the quantity the USLE is adopted to predict is the annual soil loss in tonnes/ha. Each factor (rainfall erosivity R, soil erodibility K, slope-length and steepness L and S, cover-management C, and support practice P) feeds into that single output A.
Cross-check / Contrast
Annual soil loss in tonnes/ha: this is the definition of the output A — long-term mean annual loss per unit area. This matches the USLE.
Event-based soil erosion rates: a single-storm estimate is the job of the Modified USLE (MUSLE), which replaces the rainfall factor with a runoff term; the original USLE deliberately averages over years and cannot resolve a single event.
Sedimentograph: this is a plot of sediment discharge against time at a catchment outlet, an output of routing/hydrograph models, not of the USLE.
Land degradation Index: a composite indicator that aggregates many degradation processes; the USLE quantifies only erosional soil loss, not a broad degradation index.
Hence the USLE predicts the average annual soil loss in tonnes/ha.