Title: Environmental Science: Toward a Sustainable Future Richard T. Wright
1Environmental Science Toward a Sustainable
Future Richard T. Wright
Chapter 8
- Soil Foundation for Land Ecosystems
- PPT by Clark E. Adams
2(No Transcript)
3Global 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
4Why 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.
5Soil Foundation for Land Ecosystems
- Soil and plants
- Soil degradation
- Conserving the soil
6Soil and Plants
- Soil characteristics
- Soil and plant growth
- The soil community
7Topsoil Formation
8Soil Profile
9Soil 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.
10Soil Texture
Large
Small
Smaller
11Soil Texture
12Soil Texture and Properties (see Table 8-2)
Texture Water Infiltration Water-holding Capacity Nutrient-holding Capacity Aeration
Sand Good Poor Poor Good
Silt Medium Medium Medium Medium
Clay Poor Good Good Poor
Loam Medium Medium Medium Medium
13Soil 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
14Soil 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
15Water Transport by Transpiration
16PlantSoilWater Relationships
17Productive 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
18The Soil Community
19Humus
- Partly decomposed organic matter
- High capacity for holding water and nutrients
- Typically found in O horizon
20Formation of Humus
21Humus and Development of Soil Structure
22Soil Degradation
- Erosion
- Drylands and desertification
- Irrigation and salinization
23The Results of Removal of Topsoil Sand and Gravel
24The Importance of Humus to Topsoil
25Erosion 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)
26Desertification
- 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.
27Dryland 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
28Dry lands and Desertification Formation of
Desert Pavement
29Causes of Soil Degradation
30Contour Farming and Shelterbelts
31A Global View of Soil Degradation
32Irrigation
- 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
33Salinization What It Looks Like
34Salinization
- 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
35Conserving the Soil
- Cover the soil
- Minimal or zero tillage
- Mulch for nutrients
- Maximize biomass production
- Maximize biodiversity
36End of Chapter 8