• Title of article

    Is there a critical level of organic matter in the agricultural soils of temperate regions: a review

  • Author/Authors

    Loveland، نويسنده , , P and Webb، نويسنده , , J، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    18
  • From page
    1
  • To page
    18
  • Abstract
    Soil organic matter (SOM) is a complex mixture, which influences a number of soil properties and nutrient cycling, and is itself influenced in kind and amount by land-use, soil type, climate and vegetation. There is considerable concern that, if SOM concentrations in soils are allowed to decrease too much, then the productive capacity of agriculture will be compromised by deterioration in soil physical properties and by impairment of soil nutrient cycling mechanisms. This has clear implications for the sustainable use of soil. We have focussed our discussion from the standpoint of the sustainability of UK agriculture, because we know that best, but similar concerns are equally valid elsewhere in the world. Although soil scientists would expect to find different behaviour in different soils at different ‘critical’ concentrations of SOM, it seems widely believed that a major threshold is 2% soil organic carbon (SOC) (ca. 3.4% SOM), below which potentially serious decline in soil quality will occur. eview summarises what is known about critical thresholds of SOC or SOM, mainly in soils of temperate regions. It examines critically the quantitative, rather than anecdotal or descriptive, evidence for such thresholds and their potential effects on soil quality, soil physical properties and crop nutrition, and the links between these. clude that the quantitative evidence for such thresholds is slight, although there is some evidence that there might be an desirable range of SOC covering a wide spectrum of soils, but again the quantitative evidence for this needs considerable development. There is also little quantitative evidence that reduction in SOC concentrations in the soils of England and Wales will have marked effects on other soil properties or crop yields. The data do suggest, however, that more research is required on the nature of SOC, particularly of the so-called ‘active’ or ‘fresh’ fraction and its influence on the properties of a range of soil types under different land uses. This is particularly relevant to the ongoing debate about soil quality, its definition, and the identification of appropriate indicators that relate soil quality to soil functions.
  • Keywords
    England and Wales , Critical levels , Soil organic matter , Soil quality , Temperate soils , Soil organic carbon
  • Journal title
    Soil and Tillage Research
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Soil and Tillage Research
  • Record number

    1494625