Farmers' perception of soil health: The use of quality data and its implication for farm management

Author:

Falcão Raquel N. R.1ORCID,Vrana Michal1,Hudek Csilla2,Pittarello Marco3,Zavattaro Laura3ORCID,Moretti Barbara3,Strauss Peter4,Liebhard Gunter45ORCID,Li Yangyang6,Zhang Xiaoping6,Bauer Miroslav1,Dostál Tomáš1,Gomez José A.7ORCID,Benavente‐Ferraces Iria8ORCID,García‐Gil Juan C.8,Plaza César8,Guzmán Gema9ORCID,Lopez Maria Llanos10,Pirkó Bela11,Bakacsi Zsofia11,Nokolov Dimitre12,Krása Josef1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Landscape Water Conservation Faculty of Civil Engineering, Czech Technical University in Prague Prague Czech Republic

2. Lancaster Environment Centre Lancaster University Lancaster UK

3. Department of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences University of Turin Grugliasco Italy

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

5. Department of Water, Atmosphere and Environment, Institute of Soil Physics and Rural Water Management University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna Austria

6. Institute of Soil and Water Conservation Northwest Agricultural & Forestry University Xianyang China

7. Instituto de Agricultura Sostenible (IAS), CSIC Córdoba Spain

8. Instituto de Ciencias Agrarias (ICA), CSIC Madrid Spain

9. Instituto Andaluz de Investigacion y Formacion Agraria Pesquera Alimentaria y de la Produccion Ecologica Centro Camino de Purchil Granada Andalusia Spain

10. AgriSat Iberia Albacete Spain

11. Center for Agricultural Research Institute for Soil Sciences (ATK) Budapest Hungary

12. New Bulgarian University Sofia Bulgaria

Abstract

AbstractPreventing and reversing soil degradation is essential to maintaining the ecosystem services provided by soils and guaranteeing food security. In addition to the scientific community, it is critical to engage multiple stakeholders to assess the degree of soil degradation and mitigation strategies' impact and meet the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals, European Union's Common Agricultural Policy, and other national and international goals. A semi‐structured questionnaire was distributed across countries participating in the EU Horizon‐2020 “Transforming Unsustainable management of soils in key agricultural systems in E.U. and China. Developing an integrated platform of alternatives to reverse soil degradation (TUdi).” Using farmers' associations and educational institutions as an intermediate to distribute the questionnaires was an effective strategy for gathering a high number of responses. Results from 456 responses to the questionnaire showed that farm country, size, type of agriculture, and educational level of farm managers were significantly associated with the farmers' perception of soil degradation issues. Farm size and type of agriculture were also correlated with applying a nutrient management plan. The implications of the results for soil conservation measures are discussed. Additionally, we highlight the potential of projects such as TUdi for creating collaboration networks to drive widespread adoption by farmers of technologies to reverse the degradation of agricultural soils.

Funder

European Commission

Publisher

Wiley

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