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Restoring Soil Quality to Mitigate Soil Degradation

Rattan Lal
- 13 May 2015 - 
- Vol. 7, Iss: 5, pp 5875-5895
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors proposed a strategy to minimize soil erosion, create positive organic carbon (SOC) and N budgets, enhance activity and species diversity of soil biota (micro, meso, and macro), and improve structural stability and pore geometry.
Abstract
Feeding the world population, 7.3 billion in 2015 and projected to increase to 9.5 billion by 2050, necessitates an increase in agricultural production of ~70% between 2005 and 2050. Soil degradation, characterized by decline in quality and decrease in ecosystem goods and services, is a major constraint to achieving the required increase in agricultural production. Soil is a non-renewable resource on human time scales with its vulnerability to degradation depending on complex interactions between processes, factors and causes occurring at a range of spatial and temporal scales. Among the major soil degradation processes are accelerated erosion, depletion of the soil organic carbon (SOC) pool and loss in biodiversity, loss of soil fertility and elemental imbalance, acidification and salinization. Soil degradation trends can be reversed by conversion to a restorative land use and adoption of recommended management practices. The strategy is to minimize soil erosion, create positive SOC and N budgets, enhance activity and species diversity of soil biota (micro, meso, and macro), and improve structural stability and pore geometry. Improving soil quality (i.e., increasing SOC pool, improving soil structure, enhancing soil fertility) can reduce risks of soil degradation (physical, chemical, biological and ecological) while improving the environment. Increasing the SOC pool to above the critical level (10 to 15 g/kg) is essential to set-in-motion the restorative trends. Site-specific techniques of restoring soil quality include conservation agriculture, integrated nutrient management, continuous vegetative cover such as residue mulch and cover cropping, and controlled grazing at appropriate stocking rates. The strategy is to produce “more from less” by reducing losses and increasing soil, water, and nutrient use efficiency.

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Citations
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Wattle fencing improved soil aggregate stability, organic carbon stocks and biochemical quality by restoring highly eroded mountain region soil

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness of wattle fencing as a bioengineering tool to improve soil stabilization, soil physico-chemical properties and soil organic C dynamics and reduce soil erodibility in the Boyabat mountain regions of Turkey with rough and over-steepened slope (50-70%).
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Does Rise in Temperature Adversely Affect Soil Fertility, Carbon Fractions, Microbial Biomass and Enzyme Activities under Different Land Uses?

TL;DR: Chatterjee et al. as discussed by the authors, Rukuosietuo Kuotsu, Merasenla Ao, Saurav Saha, Sanjay Kumar Ray and S. V. Ngachan.
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Long-term fertilization effects on carbon pools and carbon management index of loamy soil under grass–forage legumes mixture in semi-arid environment

TL;DR: In this article, a field experiment was conducted during 2004-2018 to assess the changes in soil carbon fractions under different fertili cation conditions, and the results showed that soil organic carbon (SOC) is a key component for sustaining crop production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mitigation of Degraded Soils by Using Biochar and Compost: a Systematic Review

TL;DR: In this article, the authors reviewed the publications on individual and combined application of biochar and compost to find out the potential role of these amendments in agriculture sector, and concluded that data on well-designed field studies and long-term effect of bio char and compost is limited.
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Centennial Fertilization-Induced Soil Processes Control Trace Metal Dynamics. Lessons from a Long-Term Bare Fallow Experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, the impact of anthropogenic activities on mineral soil fractions was investigated in the long-term bare fallow (LTBF) experiments with historical sample archives, and the impacts of prolonged application of fertilizers and amendments on the composition and properties of loamy soils were investigated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Soil carbon sequestration impacts on global climate change and food security.

TL;DR: In this article, the carbon sink capacity of the world’s agricultural and degraded soils is 50 to 66% of the historic carbon loss of 42 to 78 gigatons of carbon.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic matter and water-stable aggregates in soils

TL;DR: In this article, the effectiveness of various binding agents at different stages in the structural organization of aggregates is described and forms the basis of a model which illustrates the architecture of an aggregate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Environmental and Economic Costs of Soil Erosion and Conservation Benefits

TL;DR: With the addition of a quarter of a million people each day, the world population's food demand is increasing at a time when per capita food productivity is beginning to decline.
Journal ArticleDOI

Soil Quality: A Concept, Definition, and Framework for Evaluation (A Guest Editorial)

TL;DR: The Soil Science Society of America (SSSA) Ad Hoc Committee on Soil Quality (S-581) as mentioned in this paper defined soil quality as "the capacity (of soil) to function".
Journal ArticleDOI

持続可能性(Sustainability)の要件

TL;DR: The Bachelor of Science in Sustainability as discussed by the authors provides the broad fundamental knowledge, skills and competencies needed to drive sustainable outcomes that address today's urgent environmental, economic and social challenges.
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What hazards will a decrease in soil quality cause?

A decrease in soil quality can lead to hazards like accelerated erosion, loss of soil fertility, biodiversity decline, acidification, and salinization, hindering agricultural production and ecosystem services.