the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License.
World's soils are under threat
Luca Montanarella
Daniel Jon Pennock
Neil McKenzie
Mohamed Badraoui
Victor Chude
Isaurinda Baptista
Tekalign Mamo
Martin Yemefack
Mikha Singh Aulakh
Kazuyuki Yagi
Suk Young Hong
Pisoot Vijarnsorn
Gan-Lin Zhang
Dominique Arrouays
Helaina Black
Pavel Krasilnikov
Jaroslava Sobocká
Julio Alegre
Carlos Roberto Henriquez
Maria de Lourdes Mendonça-Santos
Miguel Taboada
David Espinosa-Victoria
Abdullah AlShankiti
Sayed Kazem AlaviPanah
Elsiddig Ahmed El Mustafa Elsheikh
Jon Hempel
Marta Camps Arbestain
Freddy Nachtergaele
Ronald Vargas
Abstract. The Intergovernmental Technical Panel on Soils has completed the first State of the World's Soil Resources Report. Globally soil erosion was identified as the gravest threat, leading to deteriorating water quality in developed regions and to lowering of crop yields in many developing regions. We need to increase nitrogen and phosphorus fertilizer use in infertile tropical and semi-tropical soils – the regions where the most food insecurity among us are found – while reducing global use of these products overall. Stores of soil organic carbon are critical in the global carbon balance, and national governments must set specific targets to stabilize or ideally increase soil organic carbon stores. Finally the quality of soil information available for policy formulation must be improved – the regional assessments in the State of the World's Soil Resources Report frequently base their evaluations on studies from the 1990s based on observations made in the 1980s or earlier.
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