TY - JOUR A1 - Siegmund, Nicole A1 - Funk, Roger A1 - Koszinsky, Sylvia A1 - Buschiazzo, Daniel A1 - Sommer, Michael T1 - Effects of low-scale landscape structures on aeolian transport processes on arable land JF - Aeolian Research N2 - The landscape of the semiarid Pampa in central Argentina is characterized by late Pleistocene aeolian deposits, covering large plains with sporadic dune structures. Since the current land use changed from extensive livestock production within the Caldenal forest ecosystem to arable land, the wind erosion risk increased distinctly. We measured wind erosion and deposition patterns at the plot scale and investigated the spatial variability of the erosion processes. The wind-induced mass-transport was measured with 18 Modified Wilson and Cooke samplers (MWAC), installed on a 1.44 ha large field in a 20 x 40 m grid. Physical and chemical soil properties from the upper soil as well as a digital elevation model were recorded in a 20 x 20 m grid. In a 5-month measuring campaign data from seven storms with three different wind directions was obtained. Results show very heterogeneous patterns of erosion and deposition for each storm and indicate favoured erosion on windward and deposits on leeward terrain positions. Furthermore, a multiple regression model was build, explaining up to 70% of the spatial variance of erosion by just using four predictors: topsoil thickness, relative elevation, soil organic carbon content and slope direction. Our findings suggest a structure-process-structure complex where the landscape structure determines the effects of recent wind erosion processes which again slowly influence the structure, leading to a gradual increase of soil heterogeneity. KW - Argentina KW - La Pampa KW - Wind erosion KW - Deposition KW - Topography KW - Mass transport KW - MWAC KW - Multiple regression Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.aeolia.2018.03.003 SN - 1875-9637 SN - 2212-1684 VL - 32 SP - 181 EP - 191 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Mueller, Marina Elsa Herta A1 - Koszinski, Sylvia A1 - Brenning, Alexander A1 - Verch, Gernot A1 - Korn, Ulrike A1 - Sommer, Michael T1 - Within-field variation of mycotoxin contamination of winter wheat is related to indicators of soil moisture JF - Plant and soil N2 - Humidity is an important determinant of the mycotoxin production (DON, ZEA) by Fusarium species in the grain ears. From a landscape perspective humidity is not evenly distributed across fields. The topographically-controlled redistribution of water within a single field rather leads to spatially heterogeneous soil water content and air humidity. Therefore we hypothesized that the spatial distribution of mycotoxins is related to these topographically-controlled factors. To test this hypothesis we studied the mycotoxin concentrations at contrasting topographic relief positions, i.e. hilltops and depressions characterized by soils of different soil moisture regimes, on ten winter wheat fields in 2006 and 2007. Maize was the preceding crop and minimum tillage was practiced in the fields. The different topographic positions were associated with moderate differences in DON and ZEA concentrations in 2006, but with significant differences in 2007, with six times higher median ZEA and two times higher median DON detected at depression sites compared to the hilltops. The depression sites correspond to a higher topographic wetness index as well as redoximorphic properties in soil profiles, which empirically supports our hypothesis at least for years showing wetter conditions in sensitive time windows for Fusarium infections. KW - Wheat KW - Mycotoxins KW - Within-field variation KW - Topography KW - Humidity KW - Soil redoximorphic feature Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s11104-010-0695-5 SN - 0032-079X SN - 1573-5036 VL - 342 IS - 1-2 SP - 289 EP - 300 PB - Springer CY - Dordrecht ER -