Abstract

The sustainable management of land for agricultural production has at its core a healthy soil, because this reduces the quantity of external inputs, reduces losses of nutrients to the environment, maximises the number of days when the soil can be worked, and has a pore structure that maximises both the retention of water in dry weather and drainage of water in wet weather. Soil health encompasses the physical, chemical, and biological features, but the use of biological indicators is the least well advanced. Sustainability also implies the balanced provision of ecosystem services, which can be more difficult to measure than single indicators. We describe how the key components of the soil food web contribute to a healthy soil and give an overview of the increasing number of scientific studies that have examined the use of biological indicators. A case study is made of the ecosystem service of water infiltration, which is quite an undertaking to measure directly, but which can be inferred from earthworm abundance and biodiversity which is relatively easy to measure. This highlights the difficulty of putting any monitoring scheme into practice and we finish by providing the considerations in starting a new soil health monitoring service in the UK and in maintaining biological monitoring in The Netherlands.

Highlights

  • Human societies are highly dependent upon healthy soils for the delivery of ecosystem goods and services, including provisioning, regulation, waste treatment, nutrient cycling, and cultural services [1]

  • Many ecosystem services are driven by trophic interactions in the soil food web [2] and interactions between organisms in the soil food web are the critical determinant of soil function [3]

  • In this paper we will explain the role of the soil food web for soil health, give examples to demonstrate the linking of soil biology to function and provide observations on the practical issues of developing and maintaining a monitoring programme for soil health

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Summary

Introduction

Human societies are highly dependent upon healthy soils for the delivery of ecosystem goods and services, including provisioning (e.g., food, fibre, timber, fuel), regulation (e.g., climate, disease, natural hazards), waste treatment, nutrient cycling, and cultural services [1]. Many ecosystem services are driven by trophic interactions in the soil food web (i.e., who eats who) [2] and interactions between organisms in the soil food web are the critical determinant of soil function [3]. In particular we discuss the relationship between an measured biological indicator (i.e., earthworms) and an ecosystem service that is technically challenging to measure (i.e., water infiltration).

Ecosystem Services and the Soil Food Web
Measuring and Monitoring Soil Condition to Preserve Ecosystem Services
Measuring an Indicator Rather than the Actual Ecosystem Service
Findings
A Soil Health Test as a Practical Tool for Scottish Growers
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