A High-Resolution Soil Erosion Risk Map of Switzerland as Strategic Policy Support System. Prasuhn, V., Liniger, H., Gisler, S., Herweg, K., Candinas, A., & Clément, J. 32:281–291.
A High-Resolution Soil Erosion Risk Map of Switzerland as Strategic Policy Support System [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Soil erosion models and soil erosion risk maps are often used as indicators to assess potential soil erosion in order to assist policy decisions. This paper shows the scientific basis of the soil erosion risk map of Switzerland and its application in policy and practice. Linking a USLE/RUSLE-based model approach (AVErosion) founded on multiple flow algorithms and the unit contributing area concept with an extremely precise and high-resolution digital terrain model (2~m~×~2~m grid) using GIS allows for a realistic assessment of the potential soil erosion risk, on single plots, i.e. uniform and comprehensive for the agricultural area of Switzerland (862,579~ha in the valley area and the lower mountain regions). The national or small-scale soil erosion prognosis has thus reached a level heretofore possible only in smaller catchment areas or single plots. Validation was carried out using soil loss data from soil erosion damage mappings in the field from long-term monitoring in different test areas. 45\,% of the evaluated agricultural area of Switzerland was classified as low potential erosion risk, 12\,% as moderate potential erosion risk, and 43\,% as high potential erosion risk. However, many of the areas classified as high potential erosion risk are located at the transition from valley to mountain zone, where many areas are used as permanent grassland, which drastically lowers their current erosion risk. The present soil erosion risk map serves on the one hand to identify and prioritise the high-erosion risk areas, and on the other hand to promote awareness amongst farmers and authorities. It was published on the internet and will be made available to the authorities in digital form. It is intended as a tool for simplifying and standardising enforcement of the legal framework for soil erosion prevention in Switzerland. The work therefore provides a successful example of cooperation between science, policy and practice. ⺠Extremely precise high-resolution erosion risk map of 2~m~×~2~m grid width. ⺠Decision support tool at a national policy scale, as well as farm and plot scale. ⺠Successful example of cooperation between science, policy-makers, and farmers. ⺠Validation with measured data from long-term erosion damage mapping. ⺠Web publication of the map as a first step towards implementation.
@article{prasuhnHighresolutionSoilErosion2013,
  title = {A High-Resolution Soil Erosion Risk Map of {{Switzerland}} as Strategic Policy Support System},
  author = {Prasuhn, Volker and Liniger, Hanspeter and Gisler, Simon and Herweg, Karl and Candinas, Anton and Clément, Jean-Pierre},
  date = {2013-05},
  journaltitle = {Land Use Policy},
  volume = {32},
  pages = {281--291},
  issn = {0264-8377},
  doi = {10.1016/j.landusepol.2012.11.006},
  url = {https://doi.org/10.1016/j.landusepol.2012.11.006},
  abstract = {Soil erosion models and soil erosion risk maps are often used as indicators to assess potential soil erosion in order to assist policy decisions. This paper shows the scientific basis of the soil erosion risk map of Switzerland and its application in policy and practice. Linking a USLE/RUSLE-based model approach (AVErosion) founded on multiple flow algorithms and the unit contributing area concept with an extremely precise and high-resolution digital terrain model (2~m~×~2~m grid) using GIS allows for a realistic assessment of the potential soil erosion risk, on single plots, i.e. uniform and comprehensive for the agricultural area of Switzerland (862,579~ha in the valley area and the lower mountain regions). The national or small-scale soil erosion prognosis has thus reached a level heretofore possible only in smaller catchment areas or single plots. Validation was carried out using soil loss data from soil erosion damage mappings in the field from long-term monitoring in different test areas. 45\,\% of the evaluated agricultural area of Switzerland was classified as low potential erosion risk, 12\,\% as moderate potential erosion risk, and 43\,\% as high potential erosion risk. However, many of the areas classified as high potential erosion risk are located at the transition from valley to mountain zone, where many areas are used as permanent grassland, which drastically lowers their current erosion risk. The present soil erosion risk map serves on the one hand to identify and prioritise the high-erosion risk areas, and on the other hand to promote awareness amongst farmers and authorities. It was published on the internet and will be made available to the authorities in digital form. It is intended as a tool for simplifying and standardising enforcement of the legal framework for soil erosion prevention in Switzerland. The work therefore provides a successful example of cooperation between science, policy and practice. ⺠Extremely precise high-resolution erosion risk map of 2~m~×~2~m grid width. ⺠Decision support tool at a national policy scale, as well as farm and plot scale. ⺠Successful example of cooperation between science, policy-makers, and farmers. ⺠Validation with measured data from long-term erosion damage mapping. ⺠Web publication of the map as a first step towards implementation.},
  keywords = {*imported-from-citeulike-INRMM,~INRMM-MiD:c-12610266,corroboration,mapping,plausibility-check,rusle,soil-erosion,soil-resources,switzerland,usle,validation}
}

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