Sustainable use of soils and time

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Sustainable use of soils and time. / Kümmerer, Klaus; Held, Martin; Pimentel, David .
In: Journal of Soil and Water Conservation, Vol. 65, No. 2, 03.2010, p. 141-149.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Kümmerer K, Held M, Pimentel D. Sustainable use of soils and time. Journal of Soil and Water Conservation. 2010 Mar;65(2):141-149. doi: 10.2489/jswc.65.2.141

Bibtex

@article{6ff4021e8e944cf4b95890db1c7386f3,
title = "Sustainable use of soils and time",
abstract = "Soils are the source of 99.7% of our food (FAO 1991 to 2001). The threat to soils has increased dramatically within the last century. Temporal features of soil use and fertility are manifold. Time-related aspects are well known to soil scientists and others. Time is not only an essential factor in soil science but also in the use and protection of soils. However, for social and economic reasons, this knowledge is often not applied. The challenge in maintaining sustainable use of soils is to develop appropriate cross-disciplinary analytical methods and measures. The focus on time presented here offers such an approach. We specify temporal features that allow us to better understand the various forms of soil degradation and the full range of sustainable and unsustainable use of soils. Therefore, temporal parameters and temporal patterns, as well as other temporal features such as time scales, points in time, and their interplay are a key issue for sustainable use of soils. We use the temporal perspective for diagnosis and therapy. Problems and delays connected with planning and action towards greater sustainability in the use of soils become more transparent. To demonstrate this, we present a temporal framework and the rules based thereon. ",
keywords = "Chemistry, Biology, Food, Soil degradation, Sustainable use, Time, Time scale",
author = "Klaus K{\"u}mmerer and Martin Held and David Pimentel",
year = "2010",
month = mar,
doi = "10.2489/jswc.65.2.141",
language = "English",
volume = "65",
pages = "141--149",
journal = "Journal of Soil and Water Conservation",
issn = "0022-4561",
publisher = "Soil and Water Conservation Society",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sustainable use of soils and time

AU - Kümmerer, Klaus

AU - Held, Martin

AU - Pimentel, David

PY - 2010/3

Y1 - 2010/3

N2 - Soils are the source of 99.7% of our food (FAO 1991 to 2001). The threat to soils has increased dramatically within the last century. Temporal features of soil use and fertility are manifold. Time-related aspects are well known to soil scientists and others. Time is not only an essential factor in soil science but also in the use and protection of soils. However, for social and economic reasons, this knowledge is often not applied. The challenge in maintaining sustainable use of soils is to develop appropriate cross-disciplinary analytical methods and measures. The focus on time presented here offers such an approach. We specify temporal features that allow us to better understand the various forms of soil degradation and the full range of sustainable and unsustainable use of soils. Therefore, temporal parameters and temporal patterns, as well as other temporal features such as time scales, points in time, and their interplay are a key issue for sustainable use of soils. We use the temporal perspective for diagnosis and therapy. Problems and delays connected with planning and action towards greater sustainability in the use of soils become more transparent. To demonstrate this, we present a temporal framework and the rules based thereon.

AB - Soils are the source of 99.7% of our food (FAO 1991 to 2001). The threat to soils has increased dramatically within the last century. Temporal features of soil use and fertility are manifold. Time-related aspects are well known to soil scientists and others. Time is not only an essential factor in soil science but also in the use and protection of soils. However, for social and economic reasons, this knowledge is often not applied. The challenge in maintaining sustainable use of soils is to develop appropriate cross-disciplinary analytical methods and measures. The focus on time presented here offers such an approach. We specify temporal features that allow us to better understand the various forms of soil degradation and the full range of sustainable and unsustainable use of soils. Therefore, temporal parameters and temporal patterns, as well as other temporal features such as time scales, points in time, and their interplay are a key issue for sustainable use of soils. We use the temporal perspective for diagnosis and therapy. Problems and delays connected with planning and action towards greater sustainability in the use of soils become more transparent. To demonstrate this, we present a temporal framework and the rules based thereon.

KW - Chemistry

KW - Biology

KW - Food

KW - Soil degradation

KW - Sustainable use

KW - Time

KW - Time scale

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77951285905&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.2489/jswc.65.2.141

DO - 10.2489/jswc.65.2.141

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 65

SP - 141

EP - 149

JO - Journal of Soil and Water Conservation

JF - Journal of Soil and Water Conservation

SN - 0022-4561

IS - 2

ER -

DOI

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