Abstract

PurposeIn urban areas, humans shape the surface, (re-)deposit natural or technogenic material, and thus become the dominant soil formation factor. The 2015 edition of the World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB) describes anthropogenic urban soils as Anthrosols or Technosols, but the methodological approaches and classification criteria of national soil classification systems are rather inconsistent. Stringent criteria for describing and mapping anthropogenic soils in urban areas and their application are still lacking, although more than half (53%) of the urban soils in Berlin are built-up by or contain anthropogenic material.Materials and methodsOn behalf of the Berlin Senate Department for the Environment, Transport and Climate Protection and in close cooperation with the German Working Group for Urban Soils, a comprehensive guideline for soil description in the Berlin metropolitan area (BMA), with special regard to anthropogenic/technogenic parent material and anthropogenic soils, has been developed. Our approach includes all previous standard works for soil description and mapping and is based on studies that have been conducted in the BMA over the last five decades. Special emphasis was placed on the integration of our manual into the classification system of the German soil mapping guideline (KA5).Results and discussionThe extension of existing data fields (e.g., the further subdivision of land use types) as well as the creation of new data fields (e.g., pH value) adapted to the requirements of urban soil mapping has been carried out. Additional technogenic materials that occur in urban environments have been added to the list of anthropogenic parent materials. Furthermore, we designed appendices that clearly characterize typical soil profiles of the BMA and depict technogenic materials, their physical and chemical characteristics, as well as their origin and distribution. Our approach will set new benchmarks for soil description and mapping in urban environments, which will improve the quality of urban soil research in the BMA. It is expected that our approach will provide baselines for urban soil mapping in other metropolitan areas.ConclusionsOur guideline is a comprehensive manual for the description of urban soils within a national soil classification system. This mapping guideline will be the future standard work for soil surveys and soil mapping in the federal state of Berlin. Currently, representatives from federal and state authorities are reviewing our guideline, with a view to potentially integrating key components into the classification system of the forthcoming 6th edition of the German soil mapping guideline (KA6).

Highlights

  • Soils play a decisive role in the ecosystem and fulfill natural and utilizing functions as specified in the German Soil Protection Act (BBodSchG 1998)

  • Since the development of previous works focusing on describing urban soils in Germany (AK Stadtböden 1997a, b, 2001), ongoing soil research in urban environments have provided new insights into soil properties and parent materials

  • In our extended soil mapping guideline for the Berlin metropolitan area (BMA), we focused on several aspects of urban soil science and soil description

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Summary

Introduction

Soils play a decisive role in the ecosystem and fulfill natural and utilizing functions as specified in the German Soil Protection Act (BBodSchG 1998) They regulate climate, water, and matter balance; provide habitats and nutrients for plants and animals; and serve as an area for cultivating plants and food production. Urbanization is not an exclusively European process (Kojima 1996) but a development that affects soils in urban and peri-urban areas worldwide (Makki and Köhler 2013; Ceccarelli et al 2014; Asabere et al 2018; Wang et al 2018). By shaping the surface, (re-)depositing natural and technogenic material, man is the dominant soil formation factor in urban and periurban areas, affecting natural soil formation factors, such as climate, relief, and parent rock, and altering soil properties

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