Salhi Adil, Benabdelouahab Sara, Heggy Essam
Geography and Development group, Abdelmalek Essaadi University, FLSH, Martil, Morocco.
Economic and Environmental Geology and Hydrology group, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain.
Sci Data. 2025 Jan 14;12(1):65. doi: 10.1038/s41597-025-04406-0.
Soil erosion in North Africa modulates agricultural and urban developments as well as the impacts of flash floods. Existing investigations and associated datasets are mainly performed in localized urban areas, often representing a limited part of a watershed. The above compromises the implementation of mitigation measures for this vast area under accentuating extremes and continuous hydroclimatic fluctuations. To address this deficiency, we use the Revised Universal Soil Loss Equation to map surface erosion, providing the first insight into the decadal impacts of land degradation, which are largely unconstrained on North Africa's continental scale. We generate soil erosion maps for the major hydrological basins of North Africa using Google Earth Engine and multiple hydroclimatic and land use datasets, covering 5.8 million square kilometers. The generated geospatial dataset integrates land use, soil erodibility, slope, vegetation cover, and land practices. The resulting product is an expansive and publicly available Soil erosion susceptibility maps and rasters dataset (SESMAR). This dataset is a crucial step toward understanding the drivers of soil erosion in this vast, poorly characterized area as well as its potential to be used for future soil conservation campaigns for both agricultural and urban planning. We validate SESMAR using the Global Rainfall Erosivity Database (GloREDa) and the European Soil Data Centre (ESDAC) datasets as well as published peer-reviewed reports across 20 watersheds, demonstrating a robust agreement in assessing the average annual soil loss values and soil erosion classes in local areas covered by independent study teams. Our continental maps show commendable accuracy, supporting scientists, practitioners, and policymakers in their efforts for more resilient land management practices across North Africa to mitigate rising hydroclimatic extremes.
北非的土壤侵蚀影响着农业和城市发展以及暴雨洪水的影响。现有的调查和相关数据集主要在局部城市地区开展,通常仅代表流域的有限部分。上述情况不利于在极端情况加剧和水文气候持续波动的背景下,在这一广大地区实施缓解措施。为弥补这一不足,我们使用修订后的通用土壤流失方程绘制地表侵蚀图,首次深入了解土地退化的年代际影响,而这在很大程度上在北非大陆尺度上尚无定论。我们利用谷歌地球引擎以及多个水文气候和土地利用数据集,为北非主要水文流域生成土壤侵蚀图,覆盖面积达580万平方公里。生成的地理空间数据集整合了土地利用、土壤可蚀性、坡度、植被覆盖和土地利用方式。最终成果是一个内容广泛且可公开获取的土壤侵蚀敏感性地图和栅格数据集(SESMAR)。该数据集是朝着了解这个广大且特征不明地区土壤侵蚀驱动因素迈出的关键一步,也有助于其未来在农业和城市规划土壤保护行动中的应用。我们使用全球降雨侵蚀力数据库(GloREDa)、欧洲土壤数据中心(ESDAC)数据集以及20个流域的同行评审发表报告对SESMAR进行验证,结果表明在评估独立研究团队所覆盖局部地区的年均土壤流失值和土壤侵蚀类别方面存在高度一致性。我们的大陆地图显示出令人称赞的准确性,为科学家、从业者和政策制定者努力在北非采取更具韧性的土地管理做法以缓解日益加剧的水文气候极端情况提供了支持。