Abstract
Pedology, the field study of soils as natural landscape bodies, has suffered
serious cutbacks in stang and funding in many developed countries. Soil
survey, a strong focus for pedology, has been most affected by this recession.
The cutbacks to pedology reflect the reduction in funding for general purpose
soil resource inventories and a decline in central government planning and
land development, as well as changing needs for soil information and perceived
failure of soil survey to respond by delivering relevant, timely information
at affordable cost.
A refocusing of research effort in pedology is required to contribute to
research into environmental issues of sustainable land management, and global
change processes and impacts. The adoption of modern, ecient approaches to
collecting, analysing, interpreting and presenting field soil data will
improve the fund-raising capability of pedology and enhance its institutional
stature. The general purpose paper soil map and soil survey report has largely
been superseded as a medium for presenting soil information. Increasingly, it
will be replaced by computer-generated, special purpose, interpretive soil
maps that are based on soil–landscape models and include more objective,
statistically estimated information on soil variability. There is a continuing
role for pedology to define the extent, distribution, properties, suitability,
and vulnerability of soils as a basis for sustainable land management. There
is a need for increasing focus on temporal changes in soil properties, greater
attention to soil properties that determine soil functioning and influence
soil use, and interpretation of the environmental record contained in soils
and regolith.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
39 articles.
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