Abstract
With the growth of concern for the impact of humankind on the environment,
soil scientists have increasingly shifted the emphasis of their work towards
the effect of agricultural and other land management practices on the
environment. This shift has required some changes to the way soil science is
practised. The example of land application of wastes, an increasingly popular
practice, is used to illustrate the role of soil science in the complex web of
scientific, social, and economic aspects of environmental issues, and the need
to influence community thinking and the policy debate. The issues often most
likely to be limiting to effluent irrigation are excessive nitrate leaching,
poor salt management, and the effects of increasing soil sodicity on current
and future land uses. The scientific challenges that these pose are discussed,
together with some broader issues including those associated with
implementation of effluent irrigation, and socioeconomic and environmental
considerations that should influence the decision to select effluent
irrigation as the means for disposal or reuse.
Subject
Earth-Surface Processes,Soil Science,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)
Cited by
132 articles.
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