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Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright

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Humus. Partly decomposed organic matter. High capacity for holding water and nutrients ... has higher humus content. Addition of humus results in topsoil ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T' Wright


1
Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable
Future Richard T. Wright
Chapter 8
  • Soil Foundation for Land Ecosystems
  • PPT by Clark E. Adams

2
Global Trend Where Did All the Farms Go?
  • Poor farming practices loss of soils and
    farmland
  • Erosion
  • Salinization
  • Development in United States loss of 1.4
    million acres of farmland per year

3
Why a Study of Soil Is Important
  • 90 of the worlds food comes from land-based
    agriculture.
  • Maintenance of soil is the cornerstone of
    sustainable civilizations.
  • Simply stated, it is the foundation of
    terrestrial life.

4
Soil Foundation for Land Ecosystems
  • Soil and plants
  • Soil degradation
  • Conserving the soil

5
Soil and Plants
  • Soil characteristics
  • Soil and plant growth
  • The soil community

6
Soil Texture
  • Soil texture refers to the percentage of each
    type of particle found in the soil.
  • Loam soil is approximately 40 sand, 40 silt,
    and 20 clay.

7
Loam Soil
  • Best for agriculture
  • Formed under prairie vegetation
  • Grundy County ranked 1
  • 40 sand, 40 silt, 20 clay
  • Silty, loamy soils considered best for agriculture

8
Clay Soils
  • Not suitable for agriculture without modification
  • Poor aeration
  • Poor water infiltration
  • Poor workability

9
Water Infiltration
  • Water absorption by soil
  • Increased by
  • Vegetation on ground protecting from splashes
  • Raindrops form soil crust
  • Plant material from crops left on field
  • Porous surface
  • Compaction decreases infiltration
  • Healthy soil microbes
  • Earthworms, etc. form tunnels to allow water to
    move into soil

10
Soil Classes
  • Mollisols fertile soils with deep A horizon
    best agriculture soils
  • Oxisols iron and aluminum oxides in B horizon
    little O horizon poor agriculture soils

11
Soil Classes
  • Alfisols well-developed O, A, E, and B horizons
    suitable for agriculture if supplemented
  • Aridisols little vertical structure thin and
    unsuitable for sustainable agriculture

12
Productive Soil
  • Good supply of nutrients and nutrient-holding
    capacity
  • Infiltration, good water-holding capacity,
    resists evaporative water loss
  • Porous structure for aeration
  • Near-neutral pH
  • Low salt content

13
Humus
  • Partly decomposed organic matter
  • High capacity for holding water and nutrients
  • Typically found in O horizon
  • Topsoil has higher humus content
  • Addition of humus results in topsoil formation
    and gain in
  • Aeration
  • Ability of air to diffuse through soil
  • Water holding capacity
  • Nutrient holding capacity
  • Water infiltration

14
Soil Degradation
  • Erosion
  • Drylands and desertification
  • Irrigation and salinization

15
Leaching
  • Water soluble substances removed from soil by
    percolating through the soil
  • Nutrients
  • Other chemicals
  • Substances can end up in groundwater
  • Sand allows the most leaching
  • Clay allows the least

16
Erosion Wind or Water
  • Splash erosion impact of falling raindrops
    breaks up the clumpy structure of topsoil
  • Sheet erosion running water carries off the fine
    particles on the soil surface
  • Gully erosion water volume and velocity carries
    away large quantities of soil, causing gullies
    (see Fig. 8-14)

17
Desertification
  • Formation and expansion of degraded areas of soil
    and vegetation cover in arid, semiarid, and
    seasonally dry areas, caused by climatic
    variations and human activities.

18
Dryland Areas
  • Cover one-third of Earths land area
  • Defined by precipitation, not temperature
  • United Nations Convention to Combat
    Desertification (UNCCD)
  • Fund projects to reverse land degradation
  • In 2003, 500 million available in grants to fund
    projects

19
Erosion in Development
  • Construction
  • Exposed subsoil has poor infiltration
  • Steep grades
  • Removal of vegetation
  • Loose and unstable soil

20
Erosion Prevention
  • Strip cropping
  • Contour farming
  • Establishment of shelterbelts
  • No-till agriculture
  • Ridge-till agriculture
  • Crop rotation
  • Placing erodeable land in CRP program
  • Planting native species
  • Maximizing biodiversity
  • Reduce row crops

21
Irrigation
  • Flood irrigation (see Fig. 8-21)
  • Center-pivot irrigation (see Fig. 7-16)
  • Can extract as much as 10,000 gallons/minute
  • Irrigated lands
  • 67 million acres or one-fifth of all cultivated
    cropland in the United States
  • 667 million acres worldwide, a 35 increase over
    the past 30 years

22
Salinization
  • A process of distilling out dissolved salts in
    irrigated water and leaving it on the land
  • A form of desertification, since land is rendered
    useless
  • Worldwide an estimated 3.7 million acres of
    agricultural land is lost annually to
    salinization and waterlogging

23
Conserving the Soil
  • Cover the soil
  • Minimal or zero tillage
  • Mulch for nutrients
  • Maximize biomass production
  • Maximize biodiversity

24
End of Chapter 8
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