Three scientific review papers on Soil Functions (local, regional, EU scales)
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Detail description
Conventional farming (CONV) is the norm in European farming, causing adverse effects on some
of the five major soil functions, viz. primary productivity, carbon sequestration and regulation,
nutrient cycling and provision, water regulation and purification, and habitat for functional and
intrinsic biodiversity. Conservation agriculture (CA) is an alternative to enhance soil functions.
However, there is no analysis of CA benefits on the five soil functions as most studies addressed
individual soil functions. The objective was to compare effects of CA and CONV practices on the
five soil functions in four major environmental zones (Atlantic North, Pannonian, Continental and
Mediterranean North) in Europe by applying expert scoring based on a synthesis of existing
literature. In each environmental zone, a team of experts scored the five soil functions due to
CA and CONV treatments and median scores indicated the overall effects on five soil functions.
Across the environmental zones, CONV had overall negative effects on soil functions with a
median score of 0.50 whereas CA had overall positive effects with a median score ranging from
0.80 to 0.83. The study proposes the need for field-based investigations, policies and subsidy
support to benefit from CA adoption to enhance the five soil functions.
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Contribution detail info
- Project
LANDMARK: Land Management Assessment Research Knowledge base ( EU H2020 project)
LANDMARK: Land Management Assessment Research Knowledge base ( EU H2020 project)
- Location
- Europe
- Authors
- Christian Bugge Henriksen
- Purpose
- Dissemination
- File type
- Document
- Created on
- Jun 21, 2018
- Origin language
- English
- Official project website
- LANDMARK: Land Management Assessment Research Knowledge base ( EU H2020 project)
- License
- CC BY
- Keywords
- Conventional farming (CONV) is the norm in European farming
- causing adverse effects on some of the five major soil functions
- viz. primary productivity
- carbon sequestration and regulation
- nutrient cycling and provision
- water regulation and purification
- and habitat for functional and intrinsic biodiversity. Conservation agriculture (CA) is an alternative to enhance soil functions. However
- there is no analysis of CA benefits on the five soil functions as most studies addressed individual soil functions. The objective was to compare effects of CA and CONV practices on the five soil functions in four major environmental zones (Atlantic North
- Pannonian
- Continental and Mediterranean North) in Europe by applying expert scoring based on a synthesis of existing literature. In each environmental zone
- a team of experts scored the five soil functions due to CA and CONV treatments and median scores indicated the overall effects on five soil functions. Across the environmental zones
- CONV had overall negative effects on soil functions with a median score of 0.50 whereas CA had overall positive effects with a median score ranging from 0.80 to 0.83. The study proposes the need for field-based investigations
- policies and subsidy support to benefit from CA adoption to enhance the five soil functions.