Soil loss tolerance
Soil loss tolerance for a specific soil, also known as the T value, which can be calculated with formula, is the maximum average annual soil loss expressed as tons per acre per year that will permit current production levels to be maintained economically and indefinitely. T values range from 1 to 5 tons per acre per year. According to the United [States Department of Agriculture]'s National Resource Conservation Service, in 2007 in the US, 99 million acres were eroding above soil loss tolerance rates. This was compared to 169 million acres in 1982. T-value's validity is questionable since T-values are spatially heterogeneous.