Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Qupperneq 30

Fjölrit RALA - 05.12.1999, Qupperneq 30
28 Desertification in the Mediterranean Europe • Climate and bioclimate is characterised by large moisture deficits, temporal variability and írequent extreme events. • Landscapes are rugged, with steep slopes, large elevation differences and are highly dissected by torrential steams. • Surface geology favours formation of soils which are sensitive to drought and erosion. • Hydrology is characterised by the scarcity of surface and ground waters, and by the need to bring water ffom elsewhere to satisfy demand. • Soil formation rates are much slower than soil loss, resulting in inadequate rootable depth and water storage capacity on sloping land. • Out of phase rainfall and vegetative periods. • Four millenniums of human land use and ffequent abuses of land. Physical desertification Desertification can be characterised as physical or chemical depending on the proc- esses involved. Physical degradation occurs on sloping land and is very extensive. The dominant physical process is accelerated soil erosion which occurs on marginal lands which have lost more than 60% of vegetative cover (Thomes 1988 ) and their are lo- cated within the semi-arid and dry-subhumid zones. Accelerated erosion may lead to reversible or irreversible desertification. Desertification is reversible when, soil moisture has been depleted beyond the tol- erance level of the economically and environmentally valuable plants, but the rootable soil depth has not been decreased below critical thresholds. Main processes responsi- ble for this type of desertifícation are soil erosion and surface structure deterioration. Both result in low rates of water infiltration and high rates of surface mn-off and hin- der seed germination. Reversible desertification can also occur when overgrazing has caused the occupation of the land by plants of low economical and environmental value. Hilly lands on marl and on Leptosols (shallow bails) are very sensitive to this type of desertification, but human action can mitigate them. Extensive areas in Spain have suffered this type this type of desertification. Irreversible desertification is the terminal stage of accelerated erosion that has per- manently reduced the rootable space and the water storage capacity of the soil below the tolerance levels of economically and environmentally valuable plants. Lands with Lithosols (very shallow soils) on limestone and southem slopes are the most vulner- able throughout the Mediterranean Europe. The extent of physical desertification is not easy to determine accurately, because dependable indices are still being developed. An approximate estimate can be made on the basis of the CORINE (1992) soil erosion risk map (Figure 1). Many areas of high potential risk are vulnerable to desertification. Seriously threatened lands by wa- ter erosion cover about 50% of the EU Mediterranean. However, not all these lands are located in the semi-arid and dry-subhumid zones. Using rootable depth and climatic aridity, it is possible to approximately estimate on a soil Map of Europe (Commission of European Communities 1985) the areas threatened by desertification as in Figure 2 (Yassoglou 1998).
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