Do we speak one language on the way to sustainable soil management in Europe? A terminology check via an EU‐wide survey

Author:

Weninger Thomas1ORCID,Ramler David1ORCID,Bondi Giulia2ORCID,Asins Sabina3ORCID,O'Sullivan Lilian2ORCID,Assennato Francesca4ORCID,Astover Alar5ORCID,Bispo Antonio6ORCID,Borůvka Luboš7ORCID,Buttafuoco Gabriele8ORCID,Calzolari Costanza9ORCID,Castanheira Nádia10ORCID,Cousin Isabelle6ORCID,van den Elsen Erik11ORCID,Foldal Cecilie12ORCID,Hessel Rudi11ORCID,Kadžiulienė Žydrė13ORCID,Kukk Liia5ORCID,Molina Maria J.3,Montagne David14ORCID,Oorts Katrien15ORCID,Pindral Sylwia16ORCID,Ungaro Fabrizio9ORCID,Klimkowicz‐Pawlas Agnieszka16ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Water and Land Management Research Federal Agency for Water Management Petzenkirchen Austria

2. Teagasc, Crops, Environment, Land Use Programme Johnstown Castle, Co. Wexford Ireland

3. Centro de Investigaciones sobre Desertificación (CSIC, UV, GVA) Albal Spain

4. Institute for Environmental Protection and Research (ISPRA) Rome Italy

5. Institute of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences Estonian University of Life Sciences Tartu Estonia

6. INRAE, Info&Sols Orléans Cedex 2 France

7. Department of Soil Science and Soil Protection, Faculty of Agrobiology, Food and Natural Resources Czech University of Life Sciences Prague Prague‐Suchdol Czech Republic

8. Institute for Agriculture and Forestry Systems in the Mediterranean National Research Council of Italy (CNR‐ISAFOM) Rende Italy

9. Institute of Bio Economy National Research Council (IBE‐CNR) Firenze Italy

10. National Institute of Agricultural & Veterinary Research, I.P. (INIAV) Oeiras Portugal

11. Team Soil, Water, and Land Use, Wageningen Environmental Research Wageningen The Netherlands

12. Department Forest Ecology and Soil Austria Research Centre for Forest Vienna Austria

13. Lithuanian Research Centre for Agriculture and Forestry Akademija Lithuania

14. Université Paris‐Saclay, INRAE, AgroParisTech, UMR ECOSYS Palaiseau France

15. Flemish Planning Bureau for the Environment and Spatial Development (VPO), Government of Flanders Brussels Belgium

16. Institute of Soil Science and Plant Cultivation—State Research Institute (IUNG) Puławy Poland

Abstract

AbstractEuropean soils are under increasing pressure, making it difficult to maintain the provision of soil ecosystem services (SESs). A better understanding of soil processes is needed to counteract soil threats (STs) and to promote sustainable soil management. The EJP SOIL programme of the EU provides a framework for the necessary research. However, different definitions of soil‐related terms potentially lead to varied understandings of concepts. Furthermore, there are numerous indicators available to quantify STs or SESs. As unclear communication is a key barrier that hinders the implementation of research results into practice, this study aimed to answer the question about whether the terminology of large‐scale initiatives is adequately understood within the soil‐science community and non‐research stakeholders. An online questionnaire was used to provide definitions for 33 soil‐related terms in both scientific and plain language, as well as indicators for seven SESs and 11 STs. Participants were asked to rate their agreement with the definitions and indicators on a seven‐grade Likert scale. The level of agreement was calculated as the percentage of ratings above 4, the neutral position. The survey was available from June to September 2023 and was distributed by a snowball approach. More than 260 stakeholders assessed the survey; 70% of respondents were researchers, and 15% were practitioners. Mean agreement levels for the definitions and indicators were generally high, at 85% and 78% respectively. However, it was apparent that the lowest agreement was found for terms that are relatively new, such as Ecosystem Services and Bundle, or unfamiliar for certain subgroups, such as ecological terms for stakeholders working at the farm scale. Due to their distinct majority, the results of this study primarily reflect the opinions of scientists. Thus, broad conclusions can only be drawn by comparing scientists with non‐scientists. In this regard, the agreement was surprisingly high across all types of questions. The combined outcomes indicate that there is still a need to facilitate communication between stakeholders and to improve knowledge distribution strategies. Nevertheless, this study can support and be used by future projects and programmes, especially regarding the harmonization of terminology and methods.

Funder

Horizon 2020 Framework Programme

Publisher

Wiley

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