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Preventing and Rehabilitating Degradation

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
StudyPulse

Preventing and Rehabilitating Degradation

Agricultural and Horticultural Studies
01 May 2026

Prevention and Rehabilitation of Environmental Degradation

Overview

Preventing environmental degradation is far more cost-effective than rehabilitating degraded land. However, where degradation has already occurred, rehabilitation techniques can restore land to productive and ecological function. This knowledge area requires students to understand techniques for preventing and rehabilitating degradation across land, soil, water and air.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Prevention focuses on maintaining soil cover, health and hydrology before degradation occurs. Rehabilitation restores function to already-degraded land. Both are necessary for sustainable agriculture and horticulture.


Prevention Techniques

Erosion Prevention

For water erosion:
- Contour farming: Cultivating along the contour (lines of equal elevation) rather than up-and-down slope; reduces runoff velocity and keeps water on the paddock
- Contour banks (earthen banks): Physical structures that intercept and redirect surface runoff, preventing rill and gully formation
- Cover crops and ground cover maintenance: Vegetative cover absorbs raindrop impact energy, reducing splash erosion; aim for >70% ground cover at all times
- Waterway revegetation and grassed waterways: Vegetated channels slow runoff and filter sediment before it reaches streams

For wind erosion:
- Windbreaks / shelterbelts: Rows of trees and shrubs perpendicular to prevailing winds; reduce wind speed and protect bare soil
- Minimum tillage / no-till practices: Maintain stubble and residues on the surface; reduces the exposure of bare, loose soil to wind
- Stubble retention: Retaining crop residues after harvest provides temporary ground cover

EXAM TIP: A key VCAA distinction is between erosion prevention (stopping soil loss before it happens) and erosion control (managing erosion once it has begun). Make sure your responses address both where relevant.

Salinity Prevention

  • Revegetation with deep-rooted perennials: Lucerne, tagasaste, native species use more soil water and reduce groundwater recharge, preventing water table rise
  • Perennial pastures: Mixed perennial grasses and legumes have deeper roots than annuals, reducing deep drainage
  • Drainage engineering: Surface and subsurface drainage systems lower water tables in at-risk areas
  • Strategic fencing and revegetation: Protecting remnant native vegetation on recharge zones (hillslopes) reduces groundwater recharge

Compaction Prevention

  • Traffic management: Controlled Traffic Farming (CTF) restricts machinery to permanent wheel tracks, leaving 95% of cropped area untrafficked
  • Avoiding cultivation of wet soils: Soil structural damage is greatest when soils are near field capacity; delay operations until soils have drained sufficiently
  • Tyres and axle load management: Lower tyre inflation pressures distribute load over a larger area; reduce axle loads on heavy machinery

Soil Acidity Prevention

  • Regular soil testing: Monitor pH every 3–5 years and apply lime before pH falls below 5.5 (preventive liming)
  • Reducing leaching: Managing nitrogen fertiliser timing and rates to minimise nitrification-driven acidification
  • Legume management: Including legumes (which can cause acidification in high quantities) in rotation but not exclusively

Nutrient Depletion Prevention

  • Nutrient budgeting: Calculate nutrient inputs (fertiliser, manure, irrigation water) vs outputs (harvested product) to ensure net balance is neutral or positive
  • Soil and tissue testing: Regular monitoring to identify deficiencies before they become severe
  • Organic matter management: Incorporate crop residues, compost and green manures to maintain soil organic matter and biological nutrient cycling

Rehabilitation Techniques

Land and Soil Rehabilitation

Degradation Rehabilitation Technique Mechanism
Erosion (gullies) Gully reclamation (rock chutes, silt fences, revegetation) Stabilise the gully head, slow water flow, allow vegetation establishment
Salinity Salt-tolerant plant establishment; drainage installation; revegetation of recharge zones Reduce water input to groundwater; manage salt expression at surface
Compaction Deep ripping / subsoil tillage; biological amelioration via deep-rooted plants Mechanically break up compacted layers; improve infiltration
Soil acidity Agricultural lime (CaCO₃): applied at rates of 1–5 t/ha based on soil test; neutralises acidity and raises pH CaCO₃ + H⁺ → Ca²⁺ + H₂O + CO₂
Nutrient depletion Targeted fertiliser application; organic amendments (compost, manure) Replace removed nutrients; restore organic matter

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often state that lime adds nutrients to the soil. Lime’s primary role is to neutralise acidity (raise pH) and reduce aluminium toxicity — it is not a nutrient fertiliser. Calcium is a secondary benefit.

Water Rehabilitation

  • Riparian zone restoration: Revegetating stream banks with native species to filter agricultural runoff, stabilise banks and reduce stream temperatures
  • Constructed wetlands: Filter nutrient-laden agricultural runoff before it enters natural waterways; trap sediment and process nitrogen and phosphorus
  • Reducing irrigation drainage to streams: Precision irrigation and re-use schemes intercept nutrient-rich drainage water before it reaches waterways
  • Removing point-source pollution: Managing effluent ponds, chemical storage areas and feedlots to prevent contamination of waterways

Air Quality Rehabilitation

While soils and water are the primary focus in AHS, air quality in agricultural contexts includes:

  • Dust suppression: Revegetation, mulching and windbreaks reduce agricultural dust — a significant contributor to PM10 pollution in dry years
  • Stubble burning alternatives: Moving away from crop stubble burning (which generates smoke and particulate matter) toward incorporation or retained stubble systems
  • Reducing ammonia emissions: Covering manure and effluent storage; reducing ammonium-based fertiliser volatilisation through incorporation

Revegetation as a Multi-Purpose Rehabilitation Strategy

Revegetation with appropriate native species addresses multiple degradation types simultaneously:

  • Reduces erosion (ground cover, root binding)
  • Lowers water tables (deep-rooted plants draw down groundwater — addressing salinity)
  • Improves biodiversity and ecological function
  • Sequesters carbon
  • Improves microclimate (shade, wind reduction)

STUDY HINT: In exam questions, link the rehabilitation technique to the specific degradation mechanism it addresses. A complete answer explains why the technique works, not just what it is.

VCAA FOCUS: Rehabilitation questions often require you to evaluate techniques. Consider: How effective is it? How long does it take? What are the costs? Are there any negative side effects? For example, deep ripping addresses compaction but must be followed by strategies to prevent re-compaction, or the benefit is temporary.

APPLICATION: A mixed cropping property in the Mallee showing signs of wind erosion (loss of fine topsoil, drift around fence lines) should implement: (1) immediate stubble retention to provide surface cover; (2) establishment of a shelterbelt on the prevailing wind side of the most exposed paddocks; (3) transition to minimum-tillage or no-till practices; and (4) soil testing to assess any associated nutrient losses requiring fertiliser response.

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