Connectivity between land, water, and people: integrating process
concepts and assessment evidence across disciplines for co-design of
soil erosion solutions
Abstract
Soil resources in East Africa are being rapidly depleted by erosion,
threatening food-, water- and livelihood security in the region. Here we
demonstrate how integration of evidence from natural and social sciences
has supported community-led change in land management in an
agro-pastoral community in northern Tanzania impacted by soil erosion.
Drone survey data and geospatial analysis of erosion extent and risk,
supported by communication of ‘process’ and ‘structural’ hydrological
connectivity, was integrated with local environmental knowledge within
participatory community workshops. Rill density data were compared
between cultivated plots that had been converted from pastoral land
recently and more established plots where slow-forming terrace
boundaries were more established. Slope length and connectivity between
plots were key factors in development of rill networks. At the two
extremes, recently converted land had a rill density ca 14 times greater
than equivalent established slow forming terraces. Direction of
cultivation, regardless of plot boundary orientation with contours, also
enhanced rill development. Evidence of this critical time window of
hillslope-scale rill erosion risk during early phases of slow-forming
terrace development successfully underpinned and catalysed a
community-led tree planting and grass seed sowing programme to mitigate
soil erosion by water. This was grounded in an implicit community
understanding of the need for effective governance mechanisms at both
community and District levels, to enable community-led actions to be
implemented effectively. The study demonstrates the wide-reaching impact
of integrated and interdisciplinary ‘upslope-downslope’ thinking to
tackle global soil erosion challenges.