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Tracks and roads for land health

Tracks and roads provide access routes for people, vehicles, equipment and stock.

Their construction and maintenance has significant impact on the rural environment.
Environmental significance of roads
Roads intercept, accumulate and transmit water within a catchment. If they are well designed, constructed and maintained the effects of this can be minimised. However, if this is done poorly, erosion and stream contamination result.
A road must, necessarily:

This creates a risk of sedimentation and erosion, which must be controlled through good design, careful construction and effective maintenance.
Principles for erosion control
Erosion will invariably occur from the surface of earthen or gravel roads. Hence, table drains, culverts and offshoot drains must be designed to cope with its. They need some capacity to transport water with small quantities of sediment to discharge positions where the sediment can be readily and safely trapped.

The key point in minimising the impact of roads is to reduce the accumulation and channelling of water by dispersing it back into the normal catchment system at as many points as possible. This means: