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Sustainable management of black soils: from practices to policies
Resumen
In the coming decades, a crucial challenge for humanity will be meeting future food demands without further undermining the integrity of the Earth’s environmental systems. As the food basket of the world, black soils are already degraded significantly after land use change from natural ecosystem to farmland, but main soil threats such as erosion by water and wind, loss of soil organic carbon (SOC) and soil organic matter (SOM), and nutrient imbalance will
[ver mas...]
In the coming decades, a crucial challenge for humanity will be meeting future food demands without further undermining the integrity of the Earth’s environmental systems. As the food basket of the world, black soils are already degraded significantly after land use change from natural ecosystem to farmland, but main soil threats such as erosion by water and wind, loss of soil organic carbon (SOC) and soil organic matter (SOM), and nutrient imbalance will further endanger its ecosystem service functions. For example, during the past several decades, black soils have lost about 50 percent of their initial SOC stock due to soil
erosion, degradation, and other unsustainable human activities (Gollany et al., 2011). Responding to these
threats, there is increasing focus on ‘Sustainable Soil Management’ as a means to maintain or increase
productivity on underperforming black soils while simultaneously decreasing the environmental impacts
of management practices. However, it is unclear what such efforts might entail for the future of intergraded management practices and policy strategies for black soil conservation. Here we present a global scale assessment of sustainable management practices of black soils that may be necessary to achieve increased yields and decreased environmental impact.
[Cerrar]
Autor
Fontana, Ademir;
Klimanov, Anatoly;
Loss, Arcangelo;
Clerici, Carlos;
Wei, Fan;
Qu, Jianhua;
Carfagno, Patricia;
Baron, Vern;
Liu, Xiaoyu;
Chen, Xueli;
Labaz, Beata;
Fuente
Global status of black soils / FAO. Chapter 4. p. 107-144
Fecha
2022-12-05
Editorial
FAO
ISBN
978-92-5-137309-5
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
parte de libro
Palabras Claves
Derechos de acceso
Abierto
Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)