Abstract

In recent years, the influx of business capital to rural areas, land transfer and adjustment in planting structure have led to the widespread of "non-grain production" of cultivated land in China, which threatens the "1.8 billion mu of arable land protection red line" as well as national food security. Both tillage layer stripped and unstripped are examples of "non-grain production" of cultivated land, which are detrimental to long-term food security because they might reduce soil fertility to varied degrees. In the former case, the original topsoil has been destroyed and the tillage layer is gone. In the latter, there may be impediments such as acidification and salinization. Domestic and international scholars have conducted extensive research on the improvement of degraded soils, including measures with guest soil and soil replacement, the reduction of soil barrier factors, biological fertilization and other measures. There are no systematic research results on the remediation of "non-grain production" of cultivated land. Using data from the National Statistical Yearbook data and literature analysis, we systematically summarized current status of "non-grain production" of cultivated land and key technologies for land improvement, recultivation and fertilization in China, and put forward future directions in this area.

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