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

  1. A.

    Annual soil loss in tonnes/ha

  2. B.

    Event based soil erosion rates

  3. C.

    Sedimentograph

  4. 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.

Explore the full course: Niacl Ao It Specialist