Degradation and resilience of soils

Author:

Lal R.1

Affiliation:

1. School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University2021 Coffey Road, Columbus OH 43210-1085USA

Abstract

Debate on global soil degradation, its extent and agronomic impact, can only be resolved through understanding of the processes and factors leading to establishment of the cause–effect relationships for major soils, ecoregions, and land uses. Systematic evaluation through long–term experimentation is needed for establishing quantitative criteria of (i) soil quality in relation to specific functions; (ii) soil degradation in relation to critical limits of key soil properties and processes; and (iii) soil resilience in relation to the ease of restoration through judicious management and discriminate use of essential input. Quantitative assessment of soil degradation can be obtained by evaluating its impact on productivity for different land uses and management systems. Interdisciplinary research is needed to quantify soil degradation effects on decrease in productivity, reduction in biomass, and decline in environment quality throught pollution and eutrophication of natural waters and emission of radiatively–active gases from terrestrial ecosystems to the atmosphere. Data from long–term field experiments in principal ecoregions are specifically needed to (i) establish relationships between soil quality versus soil degradation and soil quality versus soil resilience; (ii) identify indicators of soil quality and soil resilience; and (iii) establish critical limits of important properties for soil degradation and soil resilience. There is a need to develop and standardize techniques for measuring soil resilience.

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

Reference130 articles.

1. Barrow C. J. 1991 Land degradation : de~elopment and breakdo~n of terrestrial en~ironments. 295 pp. Cambridge University Press.

2. Concepts of Stability and Resilience in Predator-Prey Models

3. Blaikie P. & Brookfield H. 1987 Land degradation and societ~. London : Methuen.

4. Blum W. E. H. 1990 Soil pollution by heavy metals : causes processes impacts and need for future action information document. Sixth European Ministerial Conference on the Environment Brussels Belgium 11-12 October 1990 42 pp.

5. Blum W. E. H. 1994 General approaches and definition. XVth International Congress of Soil Science Acapulco Mexico 10-16 July 1994. Vol. 29 233-237.

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