Authors
Matthias Vanmaercke, Panos Panagos, Tom Vanwalleghem, Antonio Hayas, Saskia Foerster, Pasquale Borrelli, Mauro Rossi, Dino Torri, Javier Casali, Lorenzo Borselli, Olga Vigiak, Michael Maerker, Nigussie Haregeweyn, Sofie De Geeter, Wojciech Zgłobicki, Charles Bielders, Artemi Cerdà, Christian Conoscenti, Tomás de Figueiredo, Bob Evans, Valentin Golosov, Ion Ionita, Christos Karydas, Adam Kertész, Josef Krása, Caroline Le Bouteiller, Maria Radoane, Ratko Ristić, Svetla Rousseva, Milos Stankoviansky, Jannes Stolte, Christian Stolz, Rebecca Bartley, Scott Wilkinson, Ben Jarihani, Jean Poesen
Publication date
2021/7/1
Source
Earth-Science Reviews
Volume
218
Pages
103637
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Soil erosion is generally recognized as the dominant process of land degradation. The formation and expansion of gullies is often a highly significant process of soil erosion. However, our ability to assess and simulate gully erosion and its impacts remains very limited. This is especially so at regional to continental scales. As a result, gullying is often overlooked in policies and land and catchment management strategies. Nevertheless, significant progress has been made over the past decades. Based on a review of >590 scientific articles and policy documents, we provide a state-of-the-art on our ability to monitor, model and manage gully erosion at regional to continental scales. In this review we discuss the relevance and need of assessing gully erosion at regional to continental scales (Section 1); current methods to monitor gully erosion as well as pitfalls and opportunities to apply them at larger scales (section 2 …
Total citations
202120222023202412396746
Scholar articles
M Vanmaercke, P Panagos, T Vanwalleghem, A Hayas… - Earth-Science Reviews, 2021