Achieving Sustainable Earth Futures in the Anthropocene by Including Local Communities in Critical Zone Science

Author:

Naylor Larissa A.1ORCID,Dungait Jennifer A. J.23ORCID,Zheng Ying1ORCID,Buckerfield Sarah4ORCID,Green Sophie M.25ORCID,Oliver David M.4ORCID,Liu Hongyan6ORCID,Peng Jian6ORCID,Tu Chenglong7ORCID,Zhang Gan‐lin8ORCID,Zhang Xinyu8ORCID,Quine Tim A.2ORCID,Waldron Susan1ORCID,Hallett Paul D.9ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Geographical and Earth Sciences University of Glasgow Glasgow UK

2. Geography College of Life and Environmental Science University of Exeter Exeter UK

3. Carbon Management Centre SRUC‐Scotland's Rural College Edinburgh UK

4. Biological and Environmental Sciences Faculty of Natural Sciences University of Stirling Stirling UK

5. Now at School of Natural and Built Environment Queens University Belfast Belfast UK

6. College of Urban and Environmental Sciences Peking University Beijing China

7. Toxicity Testing Center Guizhou Medical University Guiyang China

8. Institute of Soil Science Chinese Academy of Science (CAS) Nanjing China

9. School of Biological Sciences University of Aberdeen Aberdeen UK

Abstract

AbstractCritical Zone Science (CZS) explores the deep evolution of landscapes from the base of the groundwater or the saprolite‐rock interface to the top of vegetation, the zone that supports all terrestrial life. Here we propose a framework for CZS to evolve further as a discipline, building on 1st generation CZOs in natural systems and 2nd generation CZOs in human‐modified systems, to incorporate human behaviour for more holistic understanding in a 3rd generation of CZOs. This concept was tested in the China‐UK CZO programme (2016–2020) that established four CZOs across China on different lithologies. Beyond conventional CZO insights into soil resources, biogeochemical cycling and hydrology across scales, surveys of farmers and local government officials led to insights into human‐environment interactions and key pressures affecting the socio‐economic livelihoods of local farmers. These learnings combined with the CZS data identified knowledge exchange (KE) opportunities to unravel diverse factors within the Land‐Water‐Food Nexus, that could directly improve local livelihoods and environmental conditions, such as reduction in fertilizer use, contributing toward Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and environmental policies. Through two‐way local KE, the local cultural context and socio‐economic considerations were more readily apparent alongside the environmental rationale for policy and local action to improve the sustainability of farming practices. Seeking solutions to understand and remediate CZ degradation caused by human‐decision making requires the co‐design of CZS that foregrounds human behavior and the opinions of those living in human modified CZOs. We show how a new transdisciplinary CZO approach for sustainable Earth futures can improve alignment of research with the practical needs of communities in stressed environments and their governments, supporting social‐ecological and planetary health research agendas and improving capacity to achieve SDGs.

Funder

Natural Environment Research Council

Foundation for Innovative Research Groups of the National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Subject

Earth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous),General Environmental Science

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