Abstract

Desertification is defined as land degradation occurring in the global drylands. It is one of the global problems targeted under the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 15). The aim of this article is to review the history of desertification and to evaluate the scientific evidence for desertification spread and severity. First quantitative estimates of the global extent and severity of desertification were dramatic and resulted in the establishment of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) in 1994. UNCCD’s task is to mitigate the negative impacts of desertification in drylands. Since the late 1990s, science has become increasingly critical towards the role of desertification in sustainable land use and food production. Many of the dramatic global assessments of desertification in the 1970s and 1980s were heavily criticized by scientists working in drylands. The used methodologies and the lack of ground-based evidence gave rise to critical reflections on desertification. Some even called desertification a myth. Later desertification assessments relied on remote sensing imagery and mapped vegetation changes in drylands. No examples of large areas completely degraded were found in the scientific literature. In science, desertification is now perceived as a local feature that certainly exists but is not as devastating as was earlier believed. However, the policy arena continues to stress the severity of the problem. Claims that millions of hectares of once productive land are annually lost due to desertification are regularly made. This highlights the disconnection between science and policy, and there is an urgent need for better dialogue in order to achieve SDG 15.

Highlights

  • Desertification is an environmental issue that has been and still is a topic of political and scientific debate

  • This perception appeared to be wrong, and since a lot of debate has arisen about the definition of desertification, its causes, the severity, the global occurrence of desertification, and the impacts it has on the dryland populations

  • Desertification research has been conducted in many dryland environments, such as China, Southern Africa, and Argentina, but the majority of desertification assessments have focused on the African Sahel, which generally is considered to be the global hotspot of desertification

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Summary

Introduction

Desertification is an environmental issue that has been and still is a topic of political and scientific debate. In the 1970s, when the early satellite images became available to science and the general public, desertification was often related to the southward extension of the Sahara desert [1,2] This perception appeared to be wrong, and since a lot of debate has arisen about the definition of desertification, its causes, the severity, the global occurrence of desertification, and the impacts it has on the dryland populations. While science seems to dispute the very existence and severity of desertification, the policy arena continues to claim that it is a serious threat for sustainable agriculture and food production in the global drylands. The article concludes with a section on the scientific evidence of the degree and global spread of desertification, and the existing disparities between the scientific and policy domains

History of Desertification
Global Assessment of Desertification
Sahelian Desertification Based on Remote Sensing
Soil Degradation Processes and Soil Quality
Desertification Scale and Sustainability
Policy View on Desertification
Findings
Concluding Remarks
Full Text
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