Soil Erosion
Soil erosion is the detachment and transport of topsoil by water, wind, or tillage. Globally, agricultural soils are eroding 10–40 times faster than they form (FAO, 2022), with estimated losses of 24 billion tons of fertile soil per year. Erosion rates above ~11 tons/ha/year exceed the natural soil-formation rate and progressively degrade yield potential.
How Soil Erosion Works
Three main erosion types affect cropland. Water erosion (sheet, rill, gully) is driven by raindrop impact and runoff on sloped or bare fields. Wind erosion dominates arid and semi-arid regions with loose, dry, low-residue soils. Tillage erosion progressively moves soil downslope with each pass of cultivation. The Universal Soil Loss Equation (USLE) estimates annual loss as A = R × K × LS × C × P, where R is rainfall erosivity, K is soil erodibility, LS is slope-length-steepness, C is cover-management, and P is support practices.
Consequences compound. Erosion removes the most biologically active topsoil first — the layer richest in organic matter, nutrients, and microbes. Each inch (2.5 cm) of topsoil lost can reduce yield 2–6% on most soils (USDA NRCS). Over decades, severe erosion strips productive A-horizon entirely, leaving subsoil that requires 30–50% more fertilizer to produce comparable yields. Offsite damages include sediment-choked waterways and nutrient runoff that drives eutrophication.
Conservation practices cut erosion dramatically. No-till or reduced tillage (see no-till) reduces water erosion 60–95%. Cover crops cut off-season erosion 60–90% by keeping roots and canopy year-round. Contour farming and terracing on slopes reduce runoff energy. Grass waterways and buffer strips capture sediment before it leaves the field. USDA NRCS estimates the US has cut cropland erosion ~40% since 1982 through adoption of these practices, though rates remain above sustainable levels on 40 million hectares.
Sources
- FAO (2022). Global Status of Soil Resources — erosion chapter.
- USDA NRCS (2023). National Resources Inventory — soil erosion trends.