“…Models that estimate or predict erosion are critical tools for rangeland management -used in applications such as estimating soil vulnerability and assessing the impacts of soil protection policies (Flanagan et al, 2001). The Rangeland Hydrology and Erosion Model (RHEM) is a process-based hydraulic soil erosion prediction tool specific for rangeland applications that estimates runoff, soil loss, and sediment yield from storm events with sufficient accuracy (RHEM performance has been evaluated by the percent bias (PBIAS) (Gupta et al, 1999) and Root mean squared error-observations standard deviation ratio (RSR) (N. Moriasi et al, 2007)) for a wide range of applications (Nearing et al, 2011;Hernandez et al, 2017;Williams et al, 2022). A RHEM scenario includes four groups of input data (Al-Hamdan et al, 2015): 1-Climate station information, often from the CLImate GENerator (CLIGEN) model (Nicks et al, 1995), 2-Soil features, 3-Slope percentage and shape, and 4-Foliar cover fractions (Annual Forbs, Bunch Grass, Shrubs, Sod Grass) and Ground cover fractions (Litter, Biological Crusts, Basal, Rock).…”