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Types of Environmental Degradation

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
StudyPulse

Types of Environmental Degradation

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
01 May 2026

Types of Environmental Degradation in Agriculture and Horticulture

Overview

Environmental degradation refers to the deterioration of the natural environment, particularly soil and water, as a result of human activity. In Australian agriculture and horticulture, degradation reduces land productivity, increases management costs, and threatens the long-term sustainability of the industry. The VCAA Study Design identifies six key types: erosion, salinity, waterlogging, compaction, soil acidity, and soil nutrient depletion.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Understanding the cause, mechanism, and consequence of each degradation type is essential for selecting appropriate prevention and remediation strategies.


1. Erosion

Definition: The removal and transport of soil particles by wind or water.

Type Mechanism Indicator
Water erosion Raindrop impact + surface runoff detach and transport particles Rills, gullies, turbid runoff
Wind erosion Wind lifts and transports fine particles (especially from bare, dry soils) Dust storms, drifts around fences
Sheet erosion Thin, uniform layer of topsoil removed across a paddock Pale soil, exposed subsoil

Causes: Removal of native vegetation, overgrazing, cultivation on steep slopes, bare fallows.

Impact: Loss of topsoil (which contains most nutrients and organic matter), reduction in water-holding capacity, off-site effects including siltation of waterways.

EXAM TIP: When asked about erosion, always specify the type (wind/water), the mechanism (how soil is moved), and the consequence (why it matters).


2. Salinity

Definition: The accumulation of soluble salts in soil and/or groundwater to levels that are harmful to plants and infrastructure.

Types:

  • Dryland salinity (secondary salinity): Clearing deep-rooted native vegetation raises water tables, bringing naturally occurring salts to the surface. Predominantly affects southern Australia.
  • Irrigation salinity: Over-irrigation raises water tables; salts accumulate in the root zone as water evaporates. Affects irrigated districts (e.g. Murray-Darling Basin).
  • Primary (naturally occurring) salinity: In naturally saline soils or areas with marine-deposited salts.

Impacts:
- Reduced plant growth and crop yield (salt stress, osmotic effects)
- Death of sensitive plants and pastures
- Damage to roads, buildings and drainage infrastructure
- Waterway salinisation

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often confuse dryland salinity (caused by changed hydrology after land clearing) with irrigation salinity (caused by over-watering). These have different causes and management approaches.


3. Waterlogging

Definition: The saturation of soil pores with water, resulting in anaerobic (oxygen-deficient) conditions in the root zone.

Causes:
- Impermeable subsoil layers (e.g. hard pans, clay subsoils) that restrict downward drainage
- High rainfall or over-irrigation on poorly drained soils
- Compaction reducing soil permeability
- Low-lying topography

Impacts:
- Root damage and death (roots cannot respire without oxygen)
- Reduced nutrient uptake (nutrient mobility changes under anaerobic conditions)
- Increased incidence of root diseases (e.g. Phytophthora root rot thrives in waterlogged soils)
- Delayed planting (soils too wet for machinery access)
- Favourable conditions for footrot in livestock if paddocks remain wet

STUDY HINT: Waterlogging and salinity are often linked. Waterlogged soils tend to develop salinity problems as the water table rises and brings salts towards the surface. Address both when discussing drainage management.


4. Compaction

Definition: The compression of soil particles, reducing pore space, porosity and permeability.

Causes:
- Heavy machinery traffic (especially on wet soils)
- Livestock treading (particularly around watering points, gates and laneways)
- Tillage at the same depth repeatedly (plough pan / tillage pan)

Impacts:
- Restricted root penetration — roots cannot access water and nutrients deeper in the profile
- Reduced water infiltration — increased runoff and erosion
- Waterlogging risk increased
- Higher fuel costs for cultivation
- Reduced germination success

Detection: Penetrometer resistance measurements (>2.0 MPa restricts root growth); visible crusting; hard, cloddy soil surface.

APPLICATION: To test for compaction in the field, use a penetrometer to measure soil resistance at different depths. Compaction layers (hard pans) show sharply higher resistance readings at a consistent depth.


5. Soil Acidity

Definition: A reduction in soil pH below the optimal range for crop and pasture growth (generally pH 5.5–7.0 in water for most agricultural plants).

Causes:
- Leaching of base cations (calcium, magnesium, potassium) from the profile
- Decomposition of organic matter releasing organic acids
- Use of ammonium-based nitrogen fertilisers (ammonium nitrification produces H⁺ ions)
- Removal of alkaline plant material in harvested crops/hay without replacement

Impacts:
- At pH < 5.5: Aluminium toxicity becomes the primary constraint — Al³⁺ is solubilised and is toxic to roots, reducing root growth and nutrient uptake
- At pH < 4.5: Manganese toxicity can also occur
- Reduced availability of phosphorus, molybdenum and calcium
- Reduced effectiveness of rhizobia (nitrogen-fixing bacteria in legume root nodules)
- Reduced microbial activity, slowing nutrient cycling

pH measurement: Soil pH is measured using a pH meter or colorimetric kit in a 1:5 soil:water or 1:5 soil:calcium chloride suspension. CaCl₂ values are typically 0.5–0.8 units lower than water values.

VCAA FOCUS: Be able to explain the aluminium toxicity mechanism in acidic soils — this is frequently examined. Also know that lime (calcium carbonate, CaCO₃) is the standard treatment for soil acidification.


6. Soil Nutrient Depletion

Definition: The progressive decline in the concentration of essential plant nutrients in the soil, below levels required for optimal plant growth and production.

Causes:
- Crop and livestock removal of nutrients without adequate replacement (mining the soil)
- Leaching of soluble nutrients (especially nitrogen and potassium) below the root zone
- Topsoil loss through erosion removing nutrient-rich organic layers
- Long-term cropping without incorporation of organic matter

Key nutrients commonly depleted:

Nutrient Function Common depletion context
Nitrogen (N) Protein, chlorophyll synthesis Intensive cropping without legumes or N fertiliser
Phosphorus (P) Root development, energy transfer Long-term cropping without phosphate fertiliser
Potassium (K) Osmotic regulation, disease resistance High-yield crops, fruit production
Sulfur (S) Amino acid synthesis Sandy, leached soils; SE Australia
Zinc (Zn) Enzyme function Widespread in southern Australian cropping soils

Detection: Regular soil testing and plant tissue analysis are essential for monitoring nutrient status.

REMEMBER: Nutrient depletion is cumulative and often invisible until significant production losses occur. Preventive monitoring through soil testing is far more cost-effective than remediation.


Summary Table

Degradation Type Primary Cause Key Consequence
Erosion Loss of ground cover, disturbance Topsoil loss, reduced fertility
Salinity Rising water tables (clearing/irrigation) Salt accumulation, plant death
Waterlogging Poor drainage, over-irrigation Anaerobic roots, root diseases
Compaction Machinery/livestock traffic Restricted roots, reduced infiltration
Soil acidity Leaching, N fertilisers, crop removal Al toxicity, reduced productivity
Nutrient depletion Harvesting without replacement Reduced yield, quality decline

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA questions frequently ask students to identify the type of degradation from a described scenario, or to explain why a particular management practice causes a specific type of degradation. Practice applying each mechanism to agricultural case studies.

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