Soil management is the application of operations, practices, and treatments to protect soil and enhance its performance (such as soil fertility or soil mechanics). It includes soil conservation, soil amendment, and optimal soil health. In agriculture, some amount of soil management is needed both in nonorganic and organic types to prevent agricultural land from becoming poorly productive over decades. Organic farming in particular emphasizes optimal soil management, because it uses soil health as the exclusive or nearly exclusive source of its fertilization and pest control.
Soil management is an important tool for addressing climate change by increasing soil carbon and as well as addressing other major environmental issues associated with modern industrial agriculture practices. Project Drawdown highlights three major soil management practices as actionable steps for climate change mitigation: improved nutrient management, conservation agriculture (including No-till agriculture), and use of regenerative agriculture.
According to the EPA, agricultural soil management practices can lead to production and emission of nitrous oxide (N2O), a major greenhouse gas and air pollutant. Activities that can contribute to N2O emissions include fertilizer usage, irrigation and tillage. The management of soils accounts for over half of the emissions from the Agriculture sector. Cattle livestock account for one third of emissions, through methane emissions. Manure management and rice cultivation also produce emissions. Using biochar may decrease N2O emissions from soils by an average of 54%. the usage of artificial fertilizer in the agricultural field it leads to nutrition imbalance in the soil.
Soils can sequester carbon dioxide (CO2) from the atmosphere, primarily by storing carbon as soil organic carbon (SOC) through the process of photosynthesis. CO2 can also be stored as inorganic carbon but this is less common. Converting natural land to agricultural land releases carbon back into the atmosphere.
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Soil health is a state of a soil meeting its range of ecosystem functions as appropriate to its environment. In more colloquial terms, the health of soil arises from favorable interactions of all soil components (living and non-living) that belong together, as in microbiota, plants and animals. It is possible that a soil can be healthy in terms of eco-system functioning but not necessarily serve crop production or human nutrition directly, hence the scientific debate on terms and measurements.
Le carbone du sol est la matière terrestre solide stockée dans les sols au niveau mondial. Cette appellation comprend à la fois la matière organique du sol et l'ensemble du carbone inorganique constituant les minéraux carbonatés. Le carbone du sol est un puits de carbone par rapport au cycle mondial du carbone, jouant un rôle dans la biogéochimie, l'atténuation du changement climatique et dans la construction de modèles climatiques mondiaux. Le carbone du sol est présent sous deux formes : inorganique et organique.
La biodiversité du sol est la variété des formes de vie, animales, végétales et microbiennes, présentes dans un sol par au moins une partie de leur cycle biologique. La biodiversité du sol inclut les habitants de la matrice du sol ainsi que ceux des « annexes du sol » (litière, bois morts en décomposition, cadavres d'animaux, déjections). C'est une partie de la biodiversité souterraine qui inclut aussi la vie des milieux cavernicoles, karstiques, des aquifères, de certaines failles et faillettes, etc.
Motivated by ever-increasing soil degradation and artificialization due to past and present urban growth dynamics, the current trend of spatial planning policies at the European and Swiss levels is promoting increased soil protection, by avoiding new devel ...
EPFL2021
Ce cours décrit les composants d'un réseau électrique. Il explique le fonctionnement des réseaux électriques et leurs limites d'utilisation. Il introduit les outils de base permettant de les piloter.
This study provides an evaluation of the industrial CO2 management potential thanks to Carbon Capture and Sequestration (CCS), thanks to an analysis of the current worldwide deployment and near future projections of these technologies. To produce these res ...
CONTEXT: Crop phenology integrates information of how environmental drivers and management practices affect plant performance and crop yield. However, little is known about the impact of cropping systems (CS) on crop phenology and how this relates to diffe ...