DIS4ME DIS4ME Homepage | DESERTLINKS Homepage | © DESERTLINKS 2004
English-EN | Español-ES | Italiano-I | Ελληνικά-GR | Portuguese-PT
Desertification Indicator System for Mediterranean Europe


1. Definition

Name

INFILTRATION CAPACITY

Brief definition

The property of soil which determines the infiltration rate of rain water.

Unit of measure

mm/hour

2. Position within the logical framework DPSIR

Type of Indicator

State. It is an intrinsic characteristic of an index of soil vulnerability to the splash of rain, to loss of sediment, and to runoff.

3. Target and political pertinence

Objective

Contribution to the identification of environmentally sensitive areas by assessing how soil fulfils the function of storing water.

Importance with respect to desertification

This indicator is part of a set of tools to identify and mitigate land degradation, developed in the MEDALUS target area of the Alentejo, Portugal. Together with the indicators of soil surface stability and data relative to the occurrence of extreme rain events, it contributes to assessing the vulnerability of land itself and consequently to the elaboration of development strategies compatible with the resources available in a given area.

International Conventions and agreements

The UNCCD emphasizes the fact that combating desertification must be tackled within the general framework of actions to promote sustainable development.

Within Agenda 21 infiltration capacity is relevant to Chapter 12 - Management of fragile ecosystems: combating desertification and drought.

Secondary objectives of the indicator

 

4. Methodological description and basic definitions

Definitions and basic concepts

The indicator defines the soil property on which the speed of rain water infiltration depends.

Benchmarks Indication of the values/ranges of value

 

Methods of measurement

Two techniques are used to determine infiltration capacity: I) experiments in drip irrigation; ii) rain simulation.

Drip irrigation experiments should be applied to an unbroken layer of surface crust, since the presence of cracks has a strong bearing on the infiltration capacity of the crust, whereas it should exclusively be due to gravitational flow. To exclude the influence of texture on absorption and to prevent lateral flow of water, the soil surface should be wet beforehand. Vegetation has to be eliminated to prevent it intercepting water. Water is poured from a container with a constant level equipped with a drip. The flow rate Q, also constant, is measured according to a millimetric scale applied to the container and a watch. On the ground around the drip, a damp, generally oval shaped patch is formed which becomes increasingly large until it stops expanding after about thirty minutes. The contours of the patch are marked with pegs after which the experiment is repeated at least twice with decreasing flow rates at each time; the damp patches, which have become smaller and smaller, are also pegged out. Thus three damp surfaces are created and their diameter and then their respective surface areas are measured (A). After this, the infiltration rate qi is calculated by means of the Darcy equation. The flow rate is calculated by Q=A*qi.

The rain simulation experiment can be carried out with the help of simple portable rain simulators. It is important to identify a number of sites sufficiently representative of the source area and for each site at least four different simulations of differing intensity should be carried out in comparable plots. Rain intensity is calculated on the basis of variations in the level of water in the instrument's tank during a certain time interval.

Limits of the indicator

These are mainly limits of an operational nature due to: the high cost, both in terms of time and of personnel, of surveys; the difficulty of identifying a number of sufficiently representative sites within the same area; and the difficulty of finding comparable plots within the same site, i.e. with characteristics that are not likely to bias the subsequent statistical data analysis.

Linkages with other indicators

Infiltration capacity, along with Soil surface stability, is part of a system designed to identify and characterise in detail, then to classify, a series of source areas, (areas that after the advent of rainfall of varying intensity become sources of sediment and surface flow).

5. Evaluation of data needs and availability

Data required to calculate the indicator

Data must necessarily be obtained from specific field surveys.

Data sources

 

Availability of data from national and international sources

 

6. Institutions that have participated in developing the indicator

Main institutions responsible

University of Amsterdam, University of Lisbon.

Other contributing organizations

 

7. Additional information

Bibliography

Imeson A.C., Suryana N., Bergkamp G., Bolwidt L., Haring R., van Leuzen P., Seijmonsbergen H., Hoogteiling D., (1999). Developing and applying indicators of desertification derived from soil-water-vegetation relationships. Mediterranean Desertification and Land Use - Final report phase III (1996-1999). Contract ENV4-CT95-0119. Thatcham, UK, pp. 47-85.

Other references

 

Contacts Name and address

Dept. Physical Geography and Soil Science
University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
Tel: (31) 20 525 7457
Fax: (31) 20 525 7431
Email: A.C.Imeson@frw.uva.nl