Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation

Ancient agricultural stone terraces, dated to the Roman and Byzantine ages, are prevalent across the Negev drylands of Southern Israel. The goal of these structures was to reduce hydrological connectivity by harvesting water runoff and controlling soil erosion, thus allowing cultivation of cereals....

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Main Authors: Ilan Stavi, Tamir Rozenberg, Ashraf Al-Ashhab, Eli Argaman, Elli Groner
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/10/1400
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spelling doaj-8f52a9f160af4faabd2026e4aa4f7ee22020-11-24T21:51:16ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412018-10-011010140010.3390/w10101400w10101400Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and VegetationIlan Stavi0Tamir Rozenberg1Ashraf Al-Ashhab2Eli Argaman3Elli Groner4Dead Sea and Arava Science Center, Masada 86900, IsraelDead Sea and Arava Science Center, Masada 86900, IsraelDead Sea and Arava Science Center, Masada 86900, IsraelSoil Erosion Research Station, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development, Bet Dagan 50250, IsraelDead Sea and Arava Science Center, Masada 86900, IsraelAncient agricultural stone terraces, dated to the Roman and Byzantine ages, are prevalent across the Negev drylands of Southern Israel. The goal of these structures was to reduce hydrological connectivity by harvesting water runoff and controlling soil erosion, thus allowing cultivation of cereals. Land abandonment and the lack of maintenance have led to the failure and collapse of many of these stone terraces. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of failure and collapse of terraces on the on-site (on-field) geo-ecosystem functioning, as determined by vegetation cover and soil quality parameters. This was achieved by studying vegetal and soil properties in shrubby vegetation patches and inter-shrub spaces of intact-terrace plots and collapsed-terrace plots, as well as in the surrounding ‘natural’ lands. Mean cover of both shrubby and herbaceous vegetation was highest in intact terraces, intermediate in ‘natural’ lands, and lowest in collapsed terraces. The overall soil quality followed the same trend as the vegetation cover. Additionally, this study shows that the anthropogenic impact on geo-ecosystem functioning can be either beneficial or detrimental. While well maintained stone terraces benefit the soil and vegetation, abandoned and unmaintained terraces may result in accelerated soil erosion and land degradation.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/10/1400anthropogenic factorgeoarchaeologygeodiversitymicrobial biomass and activitynet primary productivityorganic matter dynamicsrock fragment coversoil and water conservationterraces crumblingwheat and barley
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ilan Stavi
Tamir Rozenberg
Ashraf Al-Ashhab
Eli Argaman
Elli Groner
spellingShingle Ilan Stavi
Tamir Rozenberg
Ashraf Al-Ashhab
Eli Argaman
Elli Groner
Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
Water
anthropogenic factor
geoarchaeology
geodiversity
microbial biomass and activity
net primary productivity
organic matter dynamics
rock fragment cover
soil and water conservation
terraces crumbling
wheat and barley
author_facet Ilan Stavi
Tamir Rozenberg
Ashraf Al-Ashhab
Eli Argaman
Elli Groner
author_sort Ilan Stavi
title Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
title_short Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
title_full Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
title_fullStr Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
title_full_unstemmed Failure and Collapse of Ancient Agricultural Stone Terraces: On-Site Effects on Soil and Vegetation
title_sort failure and collapse of ancient agricultural stone terraces: on-site effects on soil and vegetation
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Ancient agricultural stone terraces, dated to the Roman and Byzantine ages, are prevalent across the Negev drylands of Southern Israel. The goal of these structures was to reduce hydrological connectivity by harvesting water runoff and controlling soil erosion, thus allowing cultivation of cereals. Land abandonment and the lack of maintenance have led to the failure and collapse of many of these stone terraces. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of failure and collapse of terraces on the on-site (on-field) geo-ecosystem functioning, as determined by vegetation cover and soil quality parameters. This was achieved by studying vegetal and soil properties in shrubby vegetation patches and inter-shrub spaces of intact-terrace plots and collapsed-terrace plots, as well as in the surrounding ‘natural’ lands. Mean cover of both shrubby and herbaceous vegetation was highest in intact terraces, intermediate in ‘natural’ lands, and lowest in collapsed terraces. The overall soil quality followed the same trend as the vegetation cover. Additionally, this study shows that the anthropogenic impact on geo-ecosystem functioning can be either beneficial or detrimental. While well maintained stone terraces benefit the soil and vegetation, abandoned and unmaintained terraces may result in accelerated soil erosion and land degradation.
topic anthropogenic factor
geoarchaeology
geodiversity
microbial biomass and activity
net primary productivity
organic matter dynamics
rock fragment cover
soil and water conservation
terraces crumbling
wheat and barley
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/10/10/1400
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