Water Erosion in the Donga Soils in Subhumid Zone in West Africa
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Abstract
The runoff and soil loss were assessed in situ at the scale of 2.12 m 2 plots
during the rainy season of 2010 to better understand the determinants and
magnitude of the massive soil loss and land subsidence (donga) in the
sub-humid zone of Africa in Karimama, North Benin. The experimental de-
sign was a split plot with two factors: the topography in 3 modalities (up-
stream, center and downstream of the donga) was assigned as main plot fac-
tor and the degree of degradation of dongas in 2 modalities (beginner dongas
and advanced dongas) was assigned as subplot factor. Runoff water was col-
lected through a storage system composed of two tanks. Data were collected
on 36 plots (9 plots per donga × 4 dongas). The runoff varies significantly
from one site to another for the rainy episode of October 10, 2010. It is twice
as high in land use areas (5.87 mm) as in W Park (2.32 mm; l.s.d. = 1.81 mm).
From upstream to downstream, runoff and soil loss increased from 2.4 mm to
85.3 mm and 80 g∙m −2 to 197 g∙m −2 , respectively. Runoff is high in the early
dongas (7.60 mm) and low in the advanced dongas (5.68 mm) in contrast to
lower soil loss in the early dongas (34 g∙m −2 ) and high in the advanced dongas
(237 g∙m −2 ). The low value of soil loss with respect to the magnitude of the
phenomenon suggests the probable occurrence of other soil loss mechanisms
to be elucidated.
