Soil Erodibility: K Factor (ESDAC - JRC, 2014)

The greatest obstacle to soil erosion modelling at larger spatial scales is the lack of data on soil characteristics. One key parameter for modelling soil erosion is the soil erodibility, expressed as the K-factor in the widely used soil erosion model, the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) and its revised version (RUSLE). The K-factor, which expresses the susceptibility of a soil to erode, is related to soil properties such as organic matter content, soil texture, soil structure and permeability.The K-factor is a lumped parameter that represents an integrated annual value of the soil profile reaction to the process of soil detachment and transport by raindrops and surface flow (Renard et al., 1997). As such soil erodibility is best estimated by carrying out direct measurements on field plots (Kinnell, 2010). However, since field measurements are expensive and often not easily transferable in space, researchers investigated the relation between “classical” soil properties and soil erodibility. The Global Soil Erosion map (GeoTIFF format) at 25km resolution is available for free download in the European Soil Data Centre (ESDAC) [https://esdac.jrc.ec.europa.eu/resource-type/datasets], along with other resampled input datasets including the R-factor, C-factor, LS-factor, and other RUSLE outputs (2001 and 2012 soil loss). Citation: Borrelli P., Robinson D.A., Fleischer L.R., Lugato E., Ballabio C., Alewell C., Meusburger K., Modugno, S., Schutt, B. Ferro, V. Bagarello, V. Van Oost, K., Montanarella, L., Panagos P. 2017. An assessment of the global impact of 21st century land use change on soil erosion. [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02142-7]Nature Communications, 8 (1): art. no. 2013

Data and Resources

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Additional Info

Field Value
Source https://app.mapx.org/static.html?views=MX-K91X3-RUR0U-07QJ8&zoomToViews=true#JAAc6
Author UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Maintainer UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Last Updated December 7, 2022, 07:59 (UTC)
Created December 7, 2022, 07:59 (UTC)
GUID MX-K91X3-RUR0U-07QJ8
Issued 2019-11-14 18:57:07
Language EN
Modified 2021-02-05 12:05:04
Publisher email info@mapx.org
Publisher name UNEP/GRID-Geneva
Theme Web Map
data_type geospatial
keywords_m49 WLD
projects_description Data to support assessment of risk and resilience in the Sahel region.
projects_id MX-ZU2-F8I-ZVS-JCK-FBQ
projects_title Environmental and socio-economic data to support analysis of West Africa and the Sahel
range_end_at_year 2021
range_start_at_year 2014
source_abstract The greatest obstacle to soil erosion modelling at larger spatial scales is the lack of data on soil characteristics. One key parameter for modelling soil erosion is the soil erodibility, expressed as the K-factor in the widely used soil erosion model, the Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) and its revised version (RUSLE). The K-factor, which expresses the susceptibility of a soil to erode, is related to soil properties such as organic matter content, soil texture, soil structure and permeability.The K-factor is a lumped parameter that represents an integrated annual value of the soil profile reaction to the process of soil detachment and transport by raindrops and surface flow (Renard et al., 1997). As such soil erodibility is best estimated by carrying out direct measurements on field plots (Kinnell, 2010). However, since field measurements are expensive and often not easily transferable in space, researchers investigated the relation between “classical” soil properties and soil erodibility. The Global Soil Erosion map (GeoTIFF format) at 25km resolution is available for free download in the European Soil Data Centre (ESDAC) [https://esdac.jrc.ec.europa.eu/resource-type/datasets], along with other resampled input datasets including the R-factor, C-factor, LS-factor, and other RUSLE outputs (2001 and 2012 soil loss). Citation: Borrelli P., Robinson D.A., Fleischer L.R., Lugato E., Ballabio C., Alewell C., Meusburger K., Modugno, S., Schutt, B. Ferro, V. Bagarello, V. Van Oost, K., Montanarella, L., Panagos P. 2017. An assessment of the global impact of 21st century land use change on soil erosion. [https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-017-02142-7]Nature Communications, 8 (1): art. no. 2013
source_title Soil Erodibility: K Factor (ESDAC - JRC, 2014)
spatial WLD