Sustainable soil and land management: a systems-oriented overview of scientific literature

IF 2.1 Q3 SOIL SCIENCE
Eloise Mason, Antonio Bispo, Mireille Matt, Katharina Helming, Elena Rodriguez, Rocio Lansac, Violeta Carrasco, Mohammad Rafiul Hashar, Loes Verdonk, Gundula Prokop, David Wall, Nancy Francis, Peter Laszlo, Michael Löbmann
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Abstract

Healthy soil is vital for our wellbeing and wealth. However, increasing demand for food and biomass may lead to unsustainable soil and land management practices that threaten soils. Other degradation processes such as soil sealing also endanger soil resources. Identifying and accessing the best available knowledge is crucial to address related sustainability issues and promote the needed transition towards sustainable soil and land management practices. Such knowledge has to cover all knowledge domains, system knowledge, target knowledge, and transformation knowledge. However, a comprehensive overview of existing research addressing societal needs related to soil is still missing, which hinders the identification of knowledge gaps. This study provides a detailed analysis of scientific literature to identify ongoing research activities and trends. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of scientific literature related to sustainable soil and land management was conducted. A systems-oriented analytical framework was used that combines soil and land related societal challenges with related knowledge domains. Our analysis revealed a significant increase in scientific publications and related interest in soil and land use-related research, above the average increase of publications within all scientific fields. Different forms of reduction and remediation of soil degradation processes (e.g. erosion, contamination) have been studied most extensively. Other topic areas like land take mitigation, soil biodiversity increase, increase of ecosystem services provision and climate change mitigation and adaption seem to be rather recent concerns, less investigated. We could highlight the importance of context-specific research, as different regions require different practices. For instance, boreal, tropical, karst and peatland regions were less studied. Furthermore, we found that diversifying soil management practices such as agroforestry or including livestock into arable systems are valuable options for increasing biomass, mitigating/adapting to climate change, and improving soil related ecosystem services. A recent trend towards the latter research topic indicates the transition from a soil conservation-oriented perspective to a soil service-oriented perspective, which may be better suited to integrate the social and economic dimensions of soil health improvement alongside the ecological dimension.
可持续的土壤和土地管理:以系统为导向的科学文献综述
健康的土壤对我们的福祉和财富至关重要。然而,对粮食和生物质日益增长的需求可能会导致不可持续的土壤和土地管理方法,从而威胁到土壤。土壤封闭等其他退化过程也会危及土壤资源。要解决相关的可持续性问题,促进向可持续的土壤和土地管理方法过渡,确定和获取现有的最佳知识至关重要。这些知识必须涵盖所有知识领域、系统知识、目标知识和转化知识。然而,目前仍然缺乏针对土壤相关社会需求的现有研究的全面概述,这阻碍了对知识差距的识别。本研究对科学文献进行了详细分析,以确定正在进行的研究活动和趋势。对与可持续土壤和土地管理相关的科学文献进行了定量和定性分析。研究采用了以系统为导向的分析框架,将与土壤和土地相关的社会挑战与相关知识领域结合起来。我们的分析表明,与土壤和土地利用相关的科学出版物和相关研究兴趣大幅增加,高于所有科学领域出版物的平均增幅。对不同形式的土壤退化过程(如侵蚀、污染)的减少和补救进行了最广泛的研究。其他专题领域,如减少土地占用、增加土壤生物多样性、增加生态系统服务供应以及减缓和适应气候变化,似乎是最近才关注的问题,研究较少。我们可以强调针对具体情况进行研究的重要性,因为不同地区需要不同的做法。例如,对北方、热带、喀斯特和泥炭地地区的研究较少。此外,我们还发现,农林业或将牲畜纳入耕地系统等多样化土壤管理实践是增加生物量、减缓/适应气候变化以及改善土壤相关生态系统服务的宝贵选择。后一个研究课题的最新趋势表明,人们正在从以土壤保护为导向的视角过渡到以土壤服务为导向的视角,这种视角可能更适合将改善土壤健康的社会和经济层面与生态层面结合起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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