Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic

Abstract The intent of the research is to introduce a new strategy which will allow the implementation of small retention elements in the landscape more quickly than the standard approach of comprehensive land consolidation (LC). The average implementation of an LC project takes more 5 years, and th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jiří Brychta, Jan Pacina, Petr Novák, Milada Šťastná, Pavel Raška, Martin Dolejš, Martina Brychtová, Aneta Švarcová, Petr Švehlík, Tadeáš Děd
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-04407-4
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849402613270839296
author Jiří Brychta
Jan Pacina
Petr Novák
Milada Šťastná
Pavel Raška
Martin Dolejš
Martina Brychtová
Aneta Švarcová
Petr Švehlík
Tadeáš Děd
author_facet Jiří Brychta
Jan Pacina
Petr Novák
Milada Šťastná
Pavel Raška
Martin Dolejš
Martina Brychtová
Aneta Švarcová
Petr Švehlík
Tadeáš Děd
author_sort Jiří Brychta
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The intent of the research is to introduce a new strategy which will allow the implementation of small retention elements in the landscape more quickly than the standard approach of comprehensive land consolidation (LC). The average implementation of an LC project takes more 5 years, and the implementation rate of the proposed measures are in single digits. Thus, over the short to medium term, LC will not solve the current problems of climate change and water erosion. One of the main aspects that extends the length of time taken to implement LC in the Czech Republic is the high degree of fragmentation in the ownership of agricultural land. A single block of land can be divided into dozens of individual parcels with individual owners. This very high level of fragmentation leads to a reluctance by the individual owners to farm these small parcels and thus they rent the land out to large agricultural enterprises. This leads to the creation of excessively large blocks of land, which in turn leads to acceleration of water runoff and erosion. Through an analysis of old maps and archival aerial photographs, an area of approximately 250,000 hectares of defunct field paths on arable land were identified. Since these field roads are solely owned by municipalities, they have the potential for the rapid implementation of erosion protection without administrative delays. As these paths frequently follow contour lines, they are often suitable locations for the placement of effective anti-erosion measures. On average, a reduction in erosion-prone areas of 10.85% in each cadastral territory would be possible, with a standard deviation of 10.13%. A potential reduction in areas at risk of more than 10% was identified in 4472 cadastral territories out of a total of 13,077. Using this proposed strategy, erosion-prone areas in the Czech Republic could be reduced by an average of 32.55 hectares per cadastral area, with water erosion potentially decreasing by 107.42 t yr⁻¹ per cadastral area. This equates to a total reduction of 480,382.24 t yr⁻¹ annually across the entire country.
format Article
id doaj-art-93d9bf6c5927406caeca3d0e8751975a
institution Kabale University
issn 2045-2322
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher Nature Portfolio
record_format Article
series Scientific Reports
spelling doaj-art-93d9bf6c5927406caeca3d0e8751975a2025-08-20T03:37:30ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-07-0115111210.1038/s41598-025-04407-4Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech RepublicJiří Brychta0Jan Pacina1Petr Novák2Milada Šťastná3Pavel Raška4Martin Dolejš5Martina Brychtová6Aneta Švarcová7Petr Švehlík8Tadeáš Děd9Department of Geoinformatics, Faculty of Environmental Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Geoinformatics, Faculty of Environmental Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Environment, Faculty of Environmental Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Applied and Landscape Ecology, Faculty of AgriSciences, Mendel University in BrnoDepartment of Geography, Faculty of Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Geography, Faculty of Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Landscape Management and Engineering, Faculty of Forestry and Wood Technology, Mendel University in BrnoDepartment of Landscape Architecture, Faculty of Agrobiology Food and Natural Resources, Czech University of Life Sciences PragueDepartment of Geoinformatics, Faculty of Environmental Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityDepartment of Geoinformatics, Faculty of Environmental Science, J. E. Purkyne UniversityAbstract The intent of the research is to introduce a new strategy which will allow the implementation of small retention elements in the landscape more quickly than the standard approach of comprehensive land consolidation (LC). The average implementation of an LC project takes more 5 years, and the implementation rate of the proposed measures are in single digits. Thus, over the short to medium term, LC will not solve the current problems of climate change and water erosion. One of the main aspects that extends the length of time taken to implement LC in the Czech Republic is the high degree of fragmentation in the ownership of agricultural land. A single block of land can be divided into dozens of individual parcels with individual owners. This very high level of fragmentation leads to a reluctance by the individual owners to farm these small parcels and thus they rent the land out to large agricultural enterprises. This leads to the creation of excessively large blocks of land, which in turn leads to acceleration of water runoff and erosion. Through an analysis of old maps and archival aerial photographs, an area of approximately 250,000 hectares of defunct field paths on arable land were identified. Since these field roads are solely owned by municipalities, they have the potential for the rapid implementation of erosion protection without administrative delays. As these paths frequently follow contour lines, they are often suitable locations for the placement of effective anti-erosion measures. On average, a reduction in erosion-prone areas of 10.85% in each cadastral territory would be possible, with a standard deviation of 10.13%. A potential reduction in areas at risk of more than 10% was identified in 4472 cadastral territories out of a total of 13,077. Using this proposed strategy, erosion-prone areas in the Czech Republic could be reduced by an average of 32.55 hectares per cadastral area, with water erosion potentially decreasing by 107.42 t yr⁻¹ per cadastral area. This equates to a total reduction of 480,382.24 t yr⁻¹ annually across the entire country.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-04407-4Land consolidationFarmland ownership fragmentationDefunct field roadsWater erosionCzech Republic
spellingShingle Jiří Brychta
Jan Pacina
Petr Novák
Milada Šťastná
Pavel Raška
Martin Dolejš
Martina Brychtová
Aneta Švarcová
Petr Švehlík
Tadeáš Děd
Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
Scientific Reports
Land consolidation
Farmland ownership fragmentation
Defunct field roads
Water erosion
Czech Republic
title Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
title_full Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
title_fullStr Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
title_full_unstemmed Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
title_short Using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the Czech Republic
title_sort using defunct municipal field roads to implement low cost anti erosion measures in the ownership fragmented landscape of the czech republic
topic Land consolidation
Farmland ownership fragmentation
Defunct field roads
Water erosion
Czech Republic
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-04407-4
work_keys_str_mv AT jiribrychta usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT janpacina usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT petrnovak usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT miladastastna usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT pavelraska usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT martindolejs usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT martinabrychtova usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT anetasvarcova usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT petrsvehlik usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic
AT tadeasded usingdefunctmunicipalfieldroadstoimplementlowcostantierosionmeasuresintheownershipfragmentedlandscapeoftheczechrepublic