In the rugged terrain of the Loess Plateau
in Shaanxi province, northwestern China, a remarkable transformation is taking
place in Suide county.
"This region used to be severely
affected by soil erosion, but after years of scientific management the amount
of sediment from here that ends up in the Yellow River has been substantially
reduced," said Gao Jianjian, who heads the ecological engineering department
at the soil and water conservation bureau of the Yellow River in Suide.
Xu Naimin, former chief engineer of the
Suide Soil and Water Conservation Scientific Experimental Station of the Yellow
River Water Conservancy Commission, recalled that in 1952, when he arrived
here, all he could see was yellow sand, no vegetation and a tough task ahead of
trying to control soil erosion.
In 1953, Suide established the Xindiangou
experimental site, now called Xindiangou Water and Soil Conservation Demonstration
Park, among others to study ways to combat soil erosion in the loess hills and
ravines.
Xindiangou ravine was once plagued by soil
erosion and was a major source of coarse sediment flowing into the Yellow
River.
Through over 70 years of exploration, a
"three lines of defense" integrated management model tailored to the
local topographical features of loess hills and ravines has been formulated in
Suide.
The first line of defense focuses on
constructing terraced fields on the ridges and upper regions of loess hills
where the slopes are relatively gentle. Trees and a rotation of grass and crops
are planted on the terraced fields to modify the terrain, prevent soil erosion
and enhance soil quality.
The second line emphasizes the cultivation
of shrubs along with grass on steep ravine slopes to stabilize hillsides and
prevent erosion.
The third line involves the construction of
warp-land dams, or silt dams, at the bottom of ravines for further flood
control, sediment trapping and farming. The warp-land dams are constructed to
trap silt, and the silted land on the dam can be used for agricultural use.
The system combats soil erosion from the
very tops of the hills to the bottom of the ravines. With these three lines of
defense, when rain strikes, the vegetation on the slopes of varying gradients
creates a security barrier, setting up layers of defense to prevent rain from
easily carrying away sediment.
The rich sediment intercepted by warp-land
dams is then used to plant various cash crops.
In the early 1950s, research was also
carried out in Xindiangou on the cultivation of forests that could enrich the
soil and conserve water as well as be economically profitable.
Fruit trees of over 170 grape varieties and
more than 20 apple varieties along with locust trees were introduced from
abroad for experimental plantation on the loess mountains. The first
mountainous orchard in northern Shaanxi established in Xindiangou is now a
pillar industry for regional economic development after years of experimental
plantation.
Xindiangou currently boasts over 100
species of woody plants, more than 30 types of grasses, with a vegetation
coverage of over 75 percent, achieving a remarkable sediment trapping rate of
98 percent, according to the local government.
This system has raised the soil
conservation rate to 80.08 percent. The lush greenery has become an invaluable
asset, said Gao.
This model has been widely promoted and
applied across provincial-level regions, including the rest of Shaanxi, Shanxi
provinces and the Inner Mongolia autonomous region, yielding significant
results.
Source: https://www.chinadaily.com.cn/a/202407/02/WS66834f9aa31095c51c50bcae.html