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Soil biodiversity --- Soil invertebrates --- Soil microbiology
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Soil ecology --- Soil biodiversity --- Soil structure --- Soil conservation
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Soil is the origin of the world, because it supports it, nourishes it and protects it. It is built by its biodiversity, which represents 25% of known species. It is teeming with animals and microbes that live and eat in incredibly diverse ways; this diversity simply ensures ... the functioning of terrestrial ecosystems. Soil is also the fertility of the oceans, regulates the course of rivers and modifies the climate. It is a powerful and astonishing construction of the living world. Ignoring the ground, which seems opaque and dirty, we have damaged it for millennia. Urbanization, unsuitable agriculture, salinization, pollution ... prevent it from providing its invaluable services and it disappears before our eyes by erosion. Marc-André Selosse invites us on a magnificent underground journey, accessible to all, between the components of the soil and his overflowing life. He makes us discover the underground and little-known part of the plants.
Soils --- Soil and civilization. --- Soil management. --- Soil biodiversity. --- Environmental aspects.
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The Atlas describes soil as habitat for the diversity of organisms that live under our feet. At the same time, it draws attention to the threats to soil biodiversity, such as invasive species, pollution, intensive land use practices or climate change. The Atlas provides current solutions for a sustainable management of soils. It was coordinated by the JRC and the Global Soil Biodiversity Initiative (www.globalsoilbiodiversity.org) with more than 70 contributing organisations and several hundred individual contributions. It illustrates the diversity of soil organisms, explains their geographical and temporal distribution, the ecosystem functions and services provided by soil biota. Most importantly, it draws attention to the myriad of threats to soil biodiversity. These include inappropriate land management practices (e.g. deforestation, land take for infrastructure development), agricultural systems, over-grazing, forest fires and poor water management (both irrigation and drainage). Other practices such as land conversion from grassland or forest to cropped land result in rapid loss of soil carbon, which indirectly enhances global warming. The Atlas shows that mismanaging soils could exacerbate the effects of climate change, jeopardise agricultural production, compromise the quality of ground water and worsen pollution. It also proposes solutions to safeguard soil biodiversity through the development of policies that directly or indirectly target soil health, leading to a more sustainable use.
Soil biodiversity. --- Soil biology. --- Biology --- Natural history --- Diversity, Soil biological --- Soil biological diversity --- Biodiversity --- Soil biodiversity --- Soil biology
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Climate Change and Soil Interactions examines soil system interactions and conservation strategies regarding the effects of climate change. It presents cutting-edge research in soil carbonization, soil biodiversity, and vegetation. As a resource for strategies in maintaining various interactions for eco-sustainability, topical chapters address microbial response and soil health in relation to climate change, as well as soil improvement practices. Understanding soil systems, including their various physical, chemical, and biological interactions, is imperative for regaining the vitality of soil system under changing climatic conditions. This book will address the impact of changing climatic conditions on various beneficial interactions operational in soil systems and recommend suitable strategies for maintaining such interactions. Climate Change and Soil Interactions enables agricultural, ecological, and environmental researchers to obtain up-to-date, state-of-the-art, and authoritative information regarding the impact of changing climatic conditions on various soil interactions and presents information vital to understanding the growing fields of biodiversity, sustainability, and climate change. --
Plant-soil relationships. --- Soil biodiversity. --- Diversity, Soil biological --- Soil biological diversity --- Biodiversity --- Plants and soil --- Soil-plant relationships --- Soils and plants --- Plant ecology --- Plant-soil relationships --- Soil biodiversity
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Agricultural land is subjected to a variety of societal pressures, as demands for food, animal feed, and biomass production increase, with an added requirement to simultaneously maintain natural areas and mitigate climatic and environmental impacts. The biotic elements of agricultural systems interact with the abiotic environment to generate a number of ecosystem functions that offer services benefiting humans across many scales of time and space. The intensification of agriculture generally reduces biodiversity including that within soil, and impacts negatively upon a number of regulating and supporting ecosystem services. There is a global need toward achieving sustainable agricultural systems, as also highlighted in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. There is hence a need for management regimes that enhance both agricultural production and the associated provision of multiple ecosystem services. The articles of this Research Topic enhance our knowledge of how management practices applied to agricultural systems affect the delivery of multiple ecosystem services and how trade-offs between provisioning, regulating, and supporting services can be handled both above- and below-ground. They also show the diversity of topics that need to be considered within the framework of ecosystem services delivered by agricultural systems, from knowledge on basic concepts and newly-proposed frameworks, to a focus on specific ecosystem types such as grasslands and high nature-value farmlands, pollinator habitats, and soil habitats. This diversity of topics indicates the need for broader-scope research, integrated with targeted scientific research to promote sustainable agricultural practices and to ensure food security.
soil biodiversity --- pollination --- perennial crops --- scale --- soil --- high-value farmlands --- conceptual frameworks
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Agricultural land is subjected to a variety of societal pressures, as demands for food, animal feed, and biomass production increase, with an added requirement to simultaneously maintain natural areas and mitigate climatic and environmental impacts. The biotic elements of agricultural systems interact with the abiotic environment to generate a number of ecosystem functions that offer services benefiting humans across many scales of time and space. The intensification of agriculture generally reduces biodiversity including that within soil, and impacts negatively upon a number of regulating and supporting ecosystem services. There is a global need toward achieving sustainable agricultural systems, as also highlighted in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. There is hence a need for management regimes that enhance both agricultural production and the associated provision of multiple ecosystem services. The articles of this Research Topic enhance our knowledge of how management practices applied to agricultural systems affect the delivery of multiple ecosystem services and how trade-offs between provisioning, regulating, and supporting services can be handled both above- and below-ground. They also show the diversity of topics that need to be considered within the framework of ecosystem services delivered by agricultural systems, from knowledge on basic concepts and newly-proposed frameworks, to a focus on specific ecosystem types such as grasslands and high nature-value farmlands, pollinator habitats, and soil habitats. This diversity of topics indicates the need for broader-scope research, integrated with targeted scientific research to promote sustainable agricultural practices and to ensure food security.
soil biodiversity --- pollination --- perennial crops --- scale --- soil --- high-value farmlands --- conceptual frameworks
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Agricultural land is subjected to a variety of societal pressures, as demands for food, animal feed, and biomass production increase, with an added requirement to simultaneously maintain natural areas and mitigate climatic and environmental impacts. The biotic elements of agricultural systems interact with the abiotic environment to generate a number of ecosystem functions that offer services benefiting humans across many scales of time and space. The intensification of agriculture generally reduces biodiversity including that within soil, and impacts negatively upon a number of regulating and supporting ecosystem services. There is a global need toward achieving sustainable agricultural systems, as also highlighted in the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. There is hence a need for management regimes that enhance both agricultural production and the associated provision of multiple ecosystem services. The articles of this Research Topic enhance our knowledge of how management practices applied to agricultural systems affect the delivery of multiple ecosystem services and how trade-offs between provisioning, regulating, and supporting services can be handled both above- and below-ground. They also show the diversity of topics that need to be considered within the framework of ecosystem services delivered by agricultural systems, from knowledge on basic concepts and newly-proposed frameworks, to a focus on specific ecosystem types such as grasslands and high nature-value farmlands, pollinator habitats, and soil habitats. This diversity of topics indicates the need for broader-scope research, integrated with targeted scientific research to promote sustainable agricultural practices and to ensure food security.
soil biodiversity --- pollination --- perennial crops --- scale --- soil --- high-value farmlands --- conceptual frameworks
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Soil biodiversity --- Soils --- Biodiversity --- Soil biology --- Soil fauna --- Soil microorganisms --- Rhizosphere --- soil organisms --- Europe --- ZV Biogeography --- Maps (1946-) --- E-books --- Sols --- Biologie --- Biology --- Soil biodiversity - Europe - Maps --- Soils - Europe - Maps
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Soil animals --- Soil biology --- Soil animals. --- Soil biology. --- Soil --- Animals --- Soil. --- Animals. --- Biology --- Natural history --- Soil fauna --- Compost animals --- Animalia --- Animal --- Metazoa --- Humus --- Soils --- Peat --- Periodicals --- Life Sciences --- Zoology --- soil biodiversity --- soil biology --- soil organisms --- soil ecology --- soil ecosystem functions
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