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Soils

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Photo: Moyan Brenn, Flickr, creative commons licence 2.0)
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Intensive grassland farming and soil carbon sequestration
According to this UK study there is a potential for improving soil carbon assessments if inventories increasingly assess soils below the current common level of 30 cm. The researchers estimate that over double the amount of carbon is stored in all UK grassland soils when looking at a depth of 1 metre compared to estimates where only the top 30 cm of soil is considered.
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(Photo: Neil Palmer (CIAT) Flickr creative commons licence 2.0)
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Indigenous African soil enrichment as a climate-smart sustainable agriculture alternative
Innovative, climate-smart soil-management can be developed to improve soil fertility; these can increase agricultural production and food security while contributing to climate mitigation through carbon sequestration. The authors propose the solution of recreating conditions that lead to the formation of ADE (African Dark Earths).
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Photo: Natural resources conservation service (Flickr, creative commons 2.0)
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'Climate-smart soils' may help balance the carbon budget
This paper looks at how soil can help contribute to climate mitigation.  It argues that by decreasing greenhouse gas emissions, sequestering carbon and using prudent agricultural management practices that improve the soil-nitrogen cycle (tighter cycle with less leakage), it is possible to enhance soil fertility, bolster crop productivity, improve soil biodiversity, and reduce erosion, runoff and water pollution.
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Biochar in European Soils and Agriculture: Science and Practice
This user-friendly book introduces biochar to potential users in the professional sphere. It de-mystifies the scientific, engineering and managerial issues surrounding biochar for the benefit of audiences including policy makers, landowners and farmers, land use, agricultural and environmental managers and consultants, industry and lobby groups and NGOs.
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Photo credit: USDA NRCS South Dakota (Flickr, Creative commons)
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Loss of phosphorus from soils a threat to sustainable intensification of grasslands
In this study, researchers from the Netherlands and Italy investigate the long-term (past and future) changes in phosphorus (P) budgets in grasslands used for grazing and in connection with croplands. The authors recognise a lack in the literature of studies characterising the P cycle in relation to grasslands and croplands, and - as grass-dependent livestock demand is increasing – they seek to address this lack of understanding.
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Organic agriculture in the twenty-first century: a farming practice that can help feed the future if done right
A new paper argues that organic farming has significant potential to feed a growing world population as global temperatures increase.  The researchers examine the performance of organic farming in light of four key sustainability metrics: productivity, environmental impact, economic viability and social wellbeing.
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Research specifies soil erosion’s contribution to soil carbon fluxes
Research published in Nature Climate Change shows that accelerated erosion due to agricultural management is a major threat to food security and soil sustainability. Erosion is a natural process that continually shapes the land surface. The removal of soil also removes carbon contained in that soil. With erosion removing top soil it removes the layer of the soil that has the greatest concentration of carbon.
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Biochar for Environmental Management -Science, Technology and Implementation, 2nd Edition
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The susDISH analysis method – Sustainability in the catering industry
The booklet The susDISH analysis method – Sustainability in the catering industry, taking account of both nutritional and environmental aspects in recipe planning is published by the Institute of Agricultural and Nutritional Sciences of the Halle-Wittenberg University.
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