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International Symposium on Erosion and Landscape Evolution, Anchorage : États-Unis (2011)
Impact of global changes on soil vulnerability ine the Mediterranean basin
Olivier Cerdan 1, Jean-François Desprats 1, Julien Fouché 1, Yves Le Bissonnais 2, Bruno Cheviron 1, 2, V. Simonneaux 3, Damien Raclot 2, Florent Mouillot 4
Mesoeros21 Collaboration(s)
(2011)

Hydric erosion is one of the major causes of soil degradation. In semi-arid areas, where the soil cover is already shallow, the consequences are often irreversible on a historical time scale. Global warming and the land use changes expected during the 21st century are going to influence the soils deterioration and the erosion processes. In order to protect the soil resource under the current bioclimatic context and prevent the future consequences, it is essential to apprehend the erosion risk. Many studies developed soil erosion risk modeling methodologies at various scales from regional to Continental scale. The MESOEROS project is the first which aims to understand the soil loss risk on the whole Mediterranean basin for the current climate context and also for the predicting climate changes expected for the 21st century. Two models are used: MESALES (expert rules model) and PESERA (physical based model). Both provide the soil erosion risk into five classes. Model inputs; soils properties (crusting and erodibility), climate data, DEM and land use data; come from homogenized regional datasets that cover the whole study area. After being calibrated with watersheds data and the PESERA modeling on Europe, the two modeling results are analyzed. MESALES estimates Italia, Andalusia, Catalan and Aragon regions, western part of Greece and Balkan region as threatened areas while PESERA models the arable region of Castellan y Leon, Near East and the high atlas range in Morocco as subjected to an erosion risk. The two methods model parts of northern Morocco, center and European part of Turkey, Lebanon and northern Portugal at risk while southern France, Libyan coasts and southern Greece are never threatened. Analyses of the parameter influences on the models and the modeling validation allow understanding the integration of climate change on modeling results. MESALES and PESERA point out an evolution of the soil erosion risk between the 20th and the 21st centuries around the Mediterranean basin. The two models assess a global augmentation of the soil loss risk at the Mediterranean scale. They both show an increase - in intensity and surface - of the soil erosion risk on areas already sensitive during the 20th century.
1 :  Bureau de recherches géologiques et minières (BRGM)
Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM)
2 :  Laboratoire d'étude des interactions entre sols, agrosystèmes et hydrosystèmes (LISAH)
Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] – Institut national de la recherche agronomique (INRA)
3 :  Centre d'études spatiales de la biosphère (CESBIO)
CNRS : UMR5126 – Institut de recherche pour le développement [IRD] – CNES – Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées – INSU – Université Paul Sabatier [UPS] - Toulouse III
4 :  Centre d'écologie fonctionnelle et évolutive (CEFE)
CNRS : UMR5175 – Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement [CIRAD] : UMR101 – Université Montpellier II - Sciences et techniques – Université Montpellier I – Université Paul Valéry - Montpellier III – Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes
Planète et Univers/Sciences de la Terre/Géomorphologie