368 results on '"Bispo, Antonio"'
Search Results
2. National-scale digital soil mapping performances are related to covariates and sampling density: Lessons from France
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Suleymanov, Azamat, Richer-de-Forges, Anne C., Saby, Nicolas P.A., Arrouays, Dominique, Martin, Manuel P., and Bispo, Antonio
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- 2024
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3. Selection of soil health indicators for modelling soil functions to promote smart urban planning
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Séré, Geoffroy, Le Guern, Cécile, Bispo, Antonio, Layet, Clément, Ducommun, Christophe, Clesse, Margaux, Schwartz, Christophe, and Vidal-Beaudet, Laure
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- 2024
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4. First national reference of microplastic contamination of French soils
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Palazot, Maialen, Soccalingame, Lata, Froger, Claire, Jolivet, Claudy, Bispo, Antonio, Kedzierski, Mikaël, and Bruzaud, Stéphane
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- 2024
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5. Relevance of the organic carbon to clay ratio as a national soil health indicator
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Rabot, Eva, Saby, Nicolas P.A., Martin, Manuel P., Barré, Pierre, Chenu, Claire, Cousin, Isabelle, Arrouays, Dominique, Angers, Denis, and Bispo, Antonio
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- 2024
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6. Handling of soil samples in the field, in transport to the laboratory and in the laboratory
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Jolivet, Claudy, primary, Ratié, Céline, additional, Chavrit, Déborah, additional, Soler-Dominguez, Nicolas, additional, and Bispo, Antonio, additional
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- 2023
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7. Systems knowledge for sustainable soil and land management
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Löbmann, Michael T., Maring, Linda, Prokop, Gundula, Brils, Jos, Bender, Johannes, Bispo, Antonio, and Helming, Katharina
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- 2022
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8. How does national SOC monitoring on agricultural soils align with the EU strategies? An example using five case studies
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Meurer, Katharina H.E., Hendriks, Chantal M.J., Faber, Jack H., Kuikman, Peter J., van Egmond, Fenny, Garland, Gina, Putku, Elsa, Barancikova, Gabriela, Makovníková, Jarmila, Chenu, Claire, Herrmann, Anke M., Bispo, Antonio, Meurer, Katharina H.E., Hendriks, Chantal M.J., Faber, Jack H., Kuikman, Peter J., van Egmond, Fenny, Garland, Gina, Putku, Elsa, Barancikova, Gabriela, Makovníková, Jarmila, Chenu, Claire, Herrmann, Anke M., and Bispo, Antonio
- Abstract
Soil functioning contributes to the delivery of a vast range of ecosystem goods and services, and ecosystem health is therefore reflected by the capacity of the soil to perform underlying functions. Soil organic carbon (SOC) is a key indicator for soil quality as it is an integral driver of many soil functions and associated ecosystem services. Across the globe, SOC stocks are declining due to expanding agriculture and unsustainable practices. Awareness of the fact that soil is a non-renewable resource and its functioning important for all life on Earth is increasing, especially among policymakers. As such, goals for the preservation and restoration of SOC are formulated in policies under the European Green Deal. However, the evaluation of these goals at the European level is hampered by a non-harmonized diversity in national SOC monitoring strategies. While some SOC indicators can be useful for the evaluation of most policy goals (i.e., baseline and potential SOC stocks), additional and contrasting SOC data are often required for the evaluation of the goals formulated by the different EU directives. This study provides an overview of five ongoing SOC monitoring programmes across Europe and discusses how national programmes may be aligned to evaluate goals at the EU level. Five countries with very different soil monitoring programmes were included in a case study to illustrate the potential for harmonization and standardization of SOC assessment. Based on this study, we conclude that SOC monitoring strategies can be harmonized, but not standardized. We further suggest five sampling strategies that have potential for harmonization under the proposed Directive on Soil Monitoring and Resilience.
- Published
- 2024
9. Do we speak one language on the way to sustainable soil management in Europe? A terminology check via an EU-wide survey
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Weninger, Thomas, Ramler, David, Bondi, Giulia, Asins, Sabina, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Assennato, Francesca, Astover, Alar, Bispo, Antonio, Borůvka, Luboš, Buttafuoco, Gabriele, Calzolari, Costanza, Castanheira, Nádia, Cousin, Isabelle, van den Elsen, Erik, Foldal, Cecilie, Hessel, Rudi, Kadžiulienė, Žydrė, Kukk, Liia, Molina, Maria, Montagne, David, Oorts, Katrien, Pindral, Sylwia, Ungaro, Fabrizio, Klimkowicz-Pawlas, Agnieszka, Weninger, Thomas, Ramler, David, Bondi, Giulia, Asins, Sabina, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Assennato, Francesca, Astover, Alar, Bispo, Antonio, Borůvka, Luboš, Buttafuoco, Gabriele, Calzolari, Costanza, Castanheira, Nádia, Cousin, Isabelle, van den Elsen, Erik, Foldal, Cecilie, Hessel, Rudi, Kadžiulienė, Žydrė, Kukk, Liia, Molina, Maria, Montagne, David, Oorts, Katrien, Pindral, Sylwia, Ungaro, Fabrizio, and Klimkowicz-Pawlas, Agnieszka
- Abstract
European soils are under increasing pressure, making it difficult to maintain the provision of soil ecosystem services (SESs). A better understanding of soil processes is needed to counteract soil threats (STs) and to promote sustainable soil management. The EJP SOIL programme of the EU provides a framework for the necessary research. However, different definitions of soil-related terms potentially lead to varied understandings of concepts. Furthermore, there are numerous indicators available to quantify STs or SESs. As unclear communication is a key barrier that hinders the implementation of research results into practice, this study aimed to answer the question about whether the terminology of large-scale initiatives is adequately understood within the soil-science community and non-research stakeholders. An online questionnaire was used to provide definitions for 33 soil-related terms in both scientific and plain language, as well as indicators for seven SESs and 11 STs. Participants were asked to rate their agreement with the definitions and indicators on a seven-grade Likert scale. The level of agreement was calculated as the percentage of ratings above 4, the neutral position. The survey was available from June to September 2023 and was distributed by a snowball approach. More than 260 stakeholders assessed the survey; 70% of respondents were researchers, and 15% were practitioners. Mean agreement levels for the definitions and indicators were generally high, at 85% and 78% respectively. However, it was apparent that the lowest agreement was found for terms that are relatively new, such as Ecosystem Services and Bundle, or unfamiliar for certain subgroups, such as ecological terms for stakeholders working at the farm scale. Due to their distinct majority, the results of this study primarily reflect the opinions of scientists. Thus, broad conclusions can only be drawn by comparing scientists with non-scientists. In this regard, the agreement was surprisingly hi
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- 2024
10. Review of the Impacts on Water of Land-Use Changes Induced by Non-food Biomass Production
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Bispo, Antonio, Lichtfouse, Eric, Series Editor, Ranjan, Shivendu, Assistant Editor, Dasgupta, Nandita, Assistant Editor, Réchauchère, Olivier, editor, Bispo, Antonio, editor, Gabrielle, Benoît, editor, and Makowski, David, editor
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- 2018
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11. An Innovative Methodological Framework for Analyzing Existing Scientific Research on Land-Use Change and Associated Environmental Impacts
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Réchauchère, Olivier, EL Akkari, Monia, Le Perchec, Sophie, Makowski, David, Gabrielle, Benoît, Bispo, Antonio, Lichtfouse, Eric, Series Editor, Ranjan, Shivendu, Assistant Editor, Dasgupta, Nandita, Assistant Editor, Réchauchère, Olivier, editor, Bispo, Antonio, editor, Gabrielle, Benoît, editor, and Makowski, David, editor
- Published
- 2018
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12. Impacts of national scale digital soil mapping programs in France
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Arrouays, Dominique, Richer-de-Forges, Anne C., Héliès, Florence, Mulder, Vera Leatitia, Saby, Nicolas P.A., Chen, Songchao, Martin, Manuel P., Román Dobarco, Mercedes, Follain, Stéphane, Jolivet, Claudy, Laroche, Bertrand, Loiseau, Thomas, Cousin, Isabelle, Lacoste, Marine, Ranjard, Lionel, Toutain, Benoît, Le Bas, Christine, Eglin, Thomas, Bardy, Marion, Antoni, Véronique, Meersmans, Jeroen, Ratié, Céline, and Bispo, Antonio
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- 2020
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13. Possible futures of soil-mapping in France
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Voltz, Marc, Arrouays, Dominique, Bispo, Antonio, Lagacherie, Philippe, Laroche, Bertrand, Lemercier, Blandine, Richer-de-Forges, Anne, Sauter, Joëlle, and Schnebelen, Nathalie
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- 2020
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14. How does national SOC monitoring on agricultural soils align with the EU strategies? An example using five case studies
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Meurer, Katharina H. E., primary, Hendriks, Chantal M. J., additional, Faber, Jack H., additional, Kuikman, Peter J., additional, van Egmond, Fenny, additional, Garland, Gina, additional, Putku, Elsa, additional, Barancikova, Gabriela, additional, Makovníková, Jarmila, additional, Chenu, Claire, additional, Herrmann, Anke M., additional, and Bispo, Antonio, additional
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- 2024
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15. Investigating the complementarity of thermal and physical soil organic carbon fractions
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Delahaie, Amicie A., primary, Cécillon, Lauric, additional, Stojanova, Marija, additional, Abiven, Samuel, additional, Arbelet, Pierre, additional, Arrouays, Dominique, additional, Baudin, François, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Boulonne, Line, additional, Chenu, Claire, additional, Heinonsalo, Jussi, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Karhu, Kristiina, additional, Martin, Manuel P., additional, Pacini, Lorenza, additional, Poeplau, Christopher, additional, Ratié, Céline, additional, Roudier, Pierre, additional, Saby, Nicolas P. A., additional, Savignac, Florence, additional, and Barré, Pierre, additional
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- 2024
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16. Sustainable soil and land management: a systems-oriented overview of scientific literature
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European Commission, Mason, E. [0000-0002-3537-6900], Bispo, Antonio [0000-0002-6985-8385], Matt, Mireille [0000-0002-2791-4262], Helming, Katharina [0000-0002-4379-7377], Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul [0000-0001-6488-2696], Prokop, Gundula [0000-0002-5470-3049], Löbmann, Michael T. [0000-0002-3116-9752], Mason, E., Bispo, Antonio, Matt, Mireille, Helming, Katharina, Rodriguez, Elena, Lansac, Rocío, Carrasco, Violeta, Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul, Verdonk, Loes, Prokop, Gundula, Wall, David, Francis, Nancy, Laszlo, P., Löbmann, Michael T., European Commission, Mason, E. [0000-0002-3537-6900], Bispo, Antonio [0000-0002-6985-8385], Matt, Mireille [0000-0002-2791-4262], Helming, Katharina [0000-0002-4379-7377], Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul [0000-0001-6488-2696], Prokop, Gundula [0000-0002-5470-3049], Löbmann, Michael T. [0000-0002-3116-9752], Mason, E., Bispo, Antonio, Matt, Mireille, Helming, Katharina, Rodriguez, Elena, Lansac, Rocío, Carrasco, Violeta, Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul, Verdonk, Loes, Prokop, Gundula, Wall, David, Francis, Nancy, Laszlo, P., and Löbmann, Michael T.
- Abstract
Healthy soil is vital for our wellbeing and wealth. However, increasing demand for food and biomass may lead to unsustainable soil and land management practices that threaten soils. Other degradation processes such as soil sealing also endanger soil resources. Identifying and accessing the best available knowledge is crucial to address related sustainability issues and promote the needed transition towards sustainable soil and land management practices. Such knowledge has to cover all knowledge domains, system knowledge, target knowledge, and transformation knowledge. However, a comprehensive overview of existing research addressing societal needs related to soil is still missing, which hinders the identification of knowledge gaps. This study provides a detailed analysis of scientific literature to identify ongoing research activities and trends. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of scientific literature related to sustainable soil and land management was conducted. A systems-oriented analytical framework was used that combines soil and land related societal challenges with related knowledge domains. Our analysis revealed a significant increase in scientific publications and related interest in soil and land use-related research, above the average increase of publications within all scientific fields. Different forms of reduction and remediation of soil degradation processes (e.g. erosion, contamination) have been studied most extensively. Other topic areas like land take mitigation, soil biodiversity increase, increase of ecosystem services provision and climate change mitigation and adaption seem to be rather recent concerns, less investigated. We could highlight the importance of context-specific research, as different regions require different practices. For instance, boreal, tropical, karst and peatland regions were less studied. Furthermore, we found that diversifying soil management practices such as agroforestry or including livestock into arable syste
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- 2023
17. Four approaches to setting soil health targets and thresholds in agricultural soils
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Matson, Amanda, Fantappiè, Maria, Campbell, Grant A., Miranda-Vélez, Jorge F., Faber, Jack H., Gomes, Lucas Carvalho, Hessel, Rudi, Lana, Marcos, Mocali, Stefano, Smith, Pete, Robinson, David A., Bispo, Antonio, van Egmond, Fenny, Keesstra, Saskia, Saby, Nicolas P.A., Smreczak, Bozena, Froger, Claire, Suleymanov, Azamat, and Chenu, Claire
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- 2024
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18. Biogeographical patterns of the soil fungal:bacterial ratio across France
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Djemiel, Christophe, primary, Dequiedt, Samuel, additional, Bailly, Arthur, additional, Tripied, Julie, additional, Lelièvre, Mélanie, additional, Horrigue, Walid, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Saby, Nicolas, additional, Valé, Matthieu, additional, Maron, Pierre-Alain, additional, Ranjard, Lionel, additional, and Terrat, Sébastien, additional
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- 2023
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19. Unraveling biogeographical patterns and environmental drivers of soil fungal diversity at the French national scale
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Djemiel, Christophe, primary, Dequiedt, Samuel, additional, Horrigue, Walid, additional, Bailly, Arthur, additional, Lelièvre, Mélanie, additional, Tripied, Julie, additional, Guilland, Charles, additional, Perrin, Solène, additional, Comment, Gwendoline, additional, Saby, Nicolas, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Boulonne, Line, additional, Pierart, Antoine, additional, Wincker, Patrick, additional, Cruaud, Corinne, additional, Maron, Pierre-Alain, additional, Terrat, Sébastien, additional, and Ranjard, Lionel, additional
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- 2023
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20. National soil data in EU countries, where do we stand?
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Cornu, Sophie, primary, Keesstra, Saskia, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Fantappie, Maria, additional, van Egmond, Fenny, additional, Smreczak, Bozena, additional, Wawer, Rafał, additional, Pavlů, Lenka, additional, Sobocká, Jaroslava, additional, Bakacsi, Zsófia, additional, Farkas‐Iványi, Kinga, additional, Molnár, Sándor, additional, Møller, Anders Bjørn, additional, Madenoglu, Sevinc, additional, Feiziene, Dalia, additional, Oorts, Katrien, additional, Schneider, Florian, additional, Gonçalves, Maria da Conceição, additional, Mano, Raquel, additional, Garland, Gina, additional, Skalský, Rastislav, additional, O'Sullivan, Lilian, additional, Kasparinskis, Raimonds, additional, and Chenu, Claire, additional
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- 2023
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21. Investigating the complementarity of thermal and physical soil organic carbon fractions.
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Delahaie, Amicie A., Cécillon, Lauric, Stojanova, Marija, Abiven, Samuel, Arbelet, Pierre, Arrouays, Dominique, Baudin, François, Bispo, Antonio, Boulonne, Line, Chenu, Claire, Heinonsalo, Jussi, Jolivet, Claudy, Karhu, Kristiina, Martin, Manuel P., Pacini, Lorenza, Poeplau, Christopher, Ratié, Céline, Roudier, Pierre, Saby, Nicolas P. A., and Savignac, Florence
- Subjects
CARBON in soils ,FRACTIONS ,LAND cover ,MACHINE learning ,THERMAL analysis ,TOPSOIL - Abstract
Partitioning soil organic carbon (SOC) in fractions with different biogeochemical stability is useful to better understand and predict SOC dynamics, and provide information related to soil health. Multiple SOC partition schemes exist but few of them can be implemented on large sample sets and therefore be considered as relevant options for soil monitoring. The well-established particulate- (POC) vs. mineral-associated organic carbon (MAOC) physical fractionation scheme is one of them. Introduced more recently, Rock-Eval® thermal analysis coupled with the PARTY
SOC machine-learning model can also fractionate SOC into active (Ca ) and stable SOC (Cs ). A debate is emerging as to which of these methods should be recommended for soil monitoring. To investigate the complementarity or redundancy of these two fractionation schemes, we compared the quantity and environmental drivers of SOC fractions obtained on an unprecedented dataset from mainland France. About 2,000 topsoil samples were recovered all over the country, presenting contrasting land covers and pedoclimatic characteristics, and analysed. We found that the environmental drivers of the fractions were clearly different, the more stable MAOC and Cs fractions being mainly driven by soil characteristics, whereas land cover and climate had a greater influence on more labile POC and Ca fractions. The stable and labile SOC fractions provided by the two methods strongly differed in quantity (MAOC/Cs = 1.88 ± 0.46 and POC/Ca = 0.36 ± 0.17; n = 843) and drivers, suggesting that they correspond to fractions with different biogeochemical stability. We argue that, at this stage, both methods can be seen as complementary and potentially relevant for soil monitoring. As future developments, we recommend comparing how they relate to indicators of soil health such as nutrient availability or soil structural stability, and how their measurements can improve the accuracy of SOC dynamics models. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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22. Unraveling biogeographical patterns and environmental drivers of soil fungal diversity at the French national scale.
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Djemiel, Christophe, Dequiedt, Samuel, Horrigue, Walid, Bailly, Arthur, Lelièvre, Mélanie, Tripied, Julie, Guilland, Charles, Perrin, Solène, Comment, Gwendoline, Saby, Nicolas P. A., Jolivet, Claudy, Bispo, Antonio, Boulonne, Line, Pierart, Antoine, Wincker, Patrick, Cruaud, Corinne, Maron, Pierre-Alain, Terrat, Sébastien, and Ranjard, Lionel
- Subjects
SOIL ecology ,FOREST soils ,SOIL sampling ,SURFACE of the earth ,FUNGI - Abstract
The fungal kingdom is among the most diversified kingdoms on Earth, with estimations of up to 12 million species. However, it remains poorly understood, with only 150 000 fungal species currently described. Given the major ecological role of fungi in ecosystem functioning, these numbers stress the importance of investigating fungal diversity description across different ecosystem types. Here, we explored the spatial distribution of the soil fungal diversity on a broad geographical scale, using the French Soil Quality Monitoring Network that covers the whole French territory (2171 soils sampled along a systematic grid). Fungal alpha diversity was assessed directly from soil DNA using a meta-barcoding approach by targeting the 18S rDNA gene. The total accumulated fungal diversity across France included 136 219 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), i.e., about 1 % of worldwide soil fungal diversity (based on a maximum diversity estimate of 12 million) for a territory representing only 0.3 % of the terrestrial surface on Earth. Based on this dataset, the first extensive map of fungal alpha diversity was drawn and showed a heterogeneous and spatially structured distribution in large biogeographical patterns of 231 km radius for richness (Hill diversity of order 0) and smaller patterns of 36 km radius for dominant fungi (Hill diversity of order 2). As related to other environmental parameters, the spatial distribution of fungal diversity (Hill numbers based on different orders of diversity) was mainly influenced by local filters such as soil characteristics and land management and also by global filters such as climate conditions with various relative influences. Interestingly, cropped soils exhibited the highest pool of fungal diversity relative to forest and vineyard soils. To complement this, soil fungal OTU network interactions were calculated for the different land uses across France. They varied hugely and showed a loss of 75 % of the complexity in crop systems and grasslands compared to forests and up to 83 % in vineyard systems. Overall, our study revealed that a nationwide survey with a high spatial-resolution approach is relevant for deeply investigating the spatial distribution and determinism of soil fungal diversity. Our findings provide novel insights for a better understanding of soil fungal ecology across the 18S rDNA gene and upgrade biodiversity conservation policies by supplying representative repositories dedicated to soil fungi. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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23. Détection des impacts toxiques dans l'environnement: Du terrain à la règlementation
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Bispo Antonio, Grand Cécile, Burgeot Thierry
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- 2018
24. Pesticide Residues in French Soils: Occurrence, Risks, and Persistence
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Froger, Claire, primary, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Budzinski, Hélène, additional, Pierdet, Manon, additional, Caria, Giovanni, additional, Saby, Nicolas P. A., additional, Arrouays, Dominique, additional, and Bispo, Antonio, additional
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- 2023
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25. Technical report on aligned definitions and indicators characterizing agricultural soil threats and ecosystem services in various scales - EJP Soil SERENA Deliverable 1.2
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Weninger, Thomas, Ramler, David, Bondi, Giulia, Asins-Velis, Sabina, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Assennato, Francesca, Astover, Alar, Bispo, Antonio, Borůvka, Luboš, Buttafuoco, Gabriele, Calzolari, Costanza, Castanheira, Nádia, Cousin, Isabelle, van den Elsen, H.G.M., Fioramonti, Veronica, Foldal, Cecilie, Hessel, R., Kadziuliene, Zydre, Kukk, Liia, Molina, Maria, Montagne, David, Oorts, Katrien, Pindral, Sylwia, Ungaro, Fabrizio, Klimkowicz-Pawlas, Agnieszka, Weninger, Thomas, Ramler, David, Bondi, Giulia, Asins-Velis, Sabina, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Assennato, Francesca, Astover, Alar, Bispo, Antonio, Borůvka, Luboš, Buttafuoco, Gabriele, Calzolari, Costanza, Castanheira, Nádia, Cousin, Isabelle, van den Elsen, H.G.M., Fioramonti, Veronica, Foldal, Cecilie, Hessel, R., Kadziuliene, Zydre, Kukk, Liia, Molina, Maria, Montagne, David, Oorts, Katrien, Pindral, Sylwia, Ungaro, Fabrizio, and Klimkowicz-Pawlas, Agnieszka
- Abstract
The purpose of SERENA´s task 1.2 is to align research-based definitions of soil policy concepts, soil threats, ecosystem services and relevant indicators amongst end-users representing administration, decision makers and farmers from various European countries and pedo-climatic conditions. To communicate definitions and indicators to stakeholders and gather their opinions, an online questionnaire was developed and widely spread around European soil experts. The agreement of participants with proposed definitions and indicator allocations was demanded and the possibility for text comments was provided. The results showed a high level of agreement with the proposed definitions, only a few were rated distinctively lower than the average and therefore chosen for reformulation. As an interesting pattern, it was observed that rather new terms such as Ecosystem Services or Bundles were rated worse than more established ones. The text comments revealed rather clear and consistent critics and proposals for improvement, which were implemented in a set of new terminology.Files
- Published
- 2023
26. National soil data in EU countries, where do we stand?
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Cornu, Sophie, Keesstra, Saskia, Bispo, Antonio, Fantappie, Maria, van Egmond, Fenny, Smreczak, Bozena, Wawer, Rafał, Pavlů, Lenka, Sobocká, Jaroslava, Bakacsi, Zsófia, Farkas-Iványi, Kinga, Molnár, Sándor, Møller, Anders Bjørn, Madenoglu, Sevinc, Feiziene, Dalia, Oorts, Katrien, Schneider, Florian, da Conceição Gonçalves, Maria, Mano, Raquel, Garland, Gina, Skalský, Rastislav, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Kasparinskis, Raimonds, Chenu, Claire, Cornu, Sophie, Keesstra, Saskia, Bispo, Antonio, Fantappie, Maria, van Egmond, Fenny, Smreczak, Bozena, Wawer, Rafał, Pavlů, Lenka, Sobocká, Jaroslava, Bakacsi, Zsófia, Farkas-Iványi, Kinga, Molnár, Sándor, Møller, Anders Bjørn, Madenoglu, Sevinc, Feiziene, Dalia, Oorts, Katrien, Schneider, Florian, da Conceição Gonçalves, Maria, Mano, Raquel, Garland, Gina, Skalský, Rastislav, O'Sullivan, Lilian, Kasparinskis, Raimonds, and Chenu, Claire
- Abstract
At the European scale, soil characteristics are needed to evaluate soil quality, soil health and soil-based ecosystem services in the context of the European Green Deal. While some soil databases exist at the European scale, a much larger wealth of data is present in individual European countries, allowing a more detailed soil assessment. There is thus an urgent and crucial need to combine these data at the European scale. In the frame of a large European Joint Programme on agricultural soils launched by the European Commission, a survey was conducted in the spring of 2020, in the 24 European participating countries to assess the existing soil data sources, focusing on agricultural soils. The survey will become a contribution to the European Soil Observatory, launched in December 2020, which aims to collect metadata of soil databases related to all kind of land uses, including forest and urban soils. Based upon a comprehensive questionnaire, 170 soil databases were identified at local, regional and national scales. Soil parameters were divided into five groups: (1) main soil parameters according to the Global Soil Map specifications; (2) other soil chemical parameters; (3) other physical parameters; (4) other pedological parameters; and (5) soil biological features. A classification based on the environmental zones of Europe was used to distinguish the climatic zones. This survey shows that while most of the main pedological and chemical parameters are included in more than 70% of the country soil databases, water content, contamination with organic pollutants, and biological parameters are the least frequently reported parameters. Such differences will have consequences when developing an EU policy on soil health as proposed under the EU soil strategy for 2023 and using the data to derive soil health indicators. Many differences in the methods used in collecting, preparing, and analysing the soils were found, thus requiring harmonization procedures and more coopera
- Published
- 2023
27. Semantics about soil organic carbon storage: DATA4C+, a comprehensive thesaurus and classification of management practices in agriculture and forestry
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Fujisaki, Kenji, Chevallier, Tiphaine, Bispo, Antonio, Laurent, Jean-Baptiste, Thévenin, François, Chapuis-Lardy, Lydie, Cardinael, Rémi, Le Bas, Christine, Freycon, Vincent, Bénédet, Fabrice, Blanfort, Vincent, Brossard, Michel, Tella, Marie, Demenois, Julien, Fujisaki, Kenji, Chevallier, Tiphaine, Bispo, Antonio, Laurent, Jean-Baptiste, Thévenin, François, Chapuis-Lardy, Lydie, Cardinael, Rémi, Le Bas, Christine, Freycon, Vincent, Bénédet, Fabrice, Blanfort, Vincent, Brossard, Michel, Tella, Marie, and Demenois, Julien
- Abstract
Identifying the drivers of soil organic carbon (SOC) stock changes is of the utmost importance to contribute to global challenges like climate change, land degradation, biodiversity loss, or food security. Evaluating the impacts of land use and management practices in agriculture and forestry on SOC is still challenging. Merging datasets or making databases interoperable is a promising way, but still has several semantic challenges. So far, a comprehensive thesaurus and classification of management practices in agriculture and forestry has been lacking, especially while focusing on SOC storage. Therefore, the aim of this paper is to present a first comprehensive thesaurus for management practices driving SOC storage (DATA4C+). The DATA4C+ thesaurus contains 224 classified and defined terms related to land management practices in agriculture and forestry. It is organized as a hierarchical tree reflecting the drivers of SOC storage. It is oriented to be used by scientists in agronomy, forestry, and soil sciences with the aim of uniformizing the description of practices influencing SOC in their original research. It is accessible in Agroportal (http://agroportal.lirmm.fr/ontologies/DATA4CPLUS, last access: 24 March 2022) to enhance its findability, accessibility, interoperability, and reuse by scientists and others such as laboratories or land managers. Future uses of the DATA4C+ thesaurus will be crucial to improve and enrich it, but also to raise the quality of meta-analyses on SOC, and ultimately help policymakers to identify efficient agricultural and forest management practices to enhance SOC storage.
- Published
- 2023
28. Protection et diffusion des données sur les sols : des règles à comprendre pour mieux les intégrer aux recherches
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Sigal-Guille, Cloé, Demenois, Julien, Chevallier, Tiphaine, Bénédet, Fabrice, Le Bas, Christine, Bispo, Antonio, Corbiere, Pauline, Sigal-Guille, Cloé, Demenois, Julien, Chevallier, Tiphaine, Bénédet, Fabrice, Le Bas, Christine, Bispo, Antonio, and Corbiere, Pauline
- Abstract
Depuis quelques années, le sol est au coeur des enjeux globaux, que ce soit pour la lutte contre le réchauffement climatique, la préservation de la biodiversité ou la lutte contre la désertification des terres. Le carbone organique du sol y tient une place majeure de par sa contribution à plusieurs services écosystémiques. Ce regain d'intérêt accroît la demande de diffusion de données sur les sols et incite les scientifiques à apporter, à court terme, des réponses univoques sur des sujets complexes voire controversés avec des données objectives et chiffrées. Ce double mouvement nécessite un plus grand partage de données, que ce soit au moment de leur analyse ou de leur diffusion. Cette dynamique, en phase avec le mouvement de la Science Ouverte notamment, pose de nouvelles questions d'ordre juridique telles que : quelles sont les conditions juridiques permettant un tel partage de données de la recherche ? Y a-t-il des spécificités s'agissant de données issues de la recherche sur le carbone organique du sol ? L'objectif de cet article est de reprendre les principaux éléments de cette réflexion en 1) présentant le cadre juridique relatif au partage des données de la recherche sur le carbone du sol en France et en Europe, 2) proposant des outils d'aide à la décision pour partager ces données.
- Published
- 2023
29. Sustainable soil and land management : a systems-oriented overview of scientific literature
- Author
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Mason, Eloïse, Bispo, Antonio, Matt, Mireille, Helming, Katharina, Rodriguez, Elena, Lansac, Rocio, Carrasco, Violeta, Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul, Verdonk, Loes, Prokop, Gundula, Wall, David, Francis, Nancy, Laszlo, Peter, Löbmann, Michael T., Mason, Eloïse, Bispo, Antonio, Matt, Mireille, Helming, Katharina, Rodriguez, Elena, Lansac, Rocio, Carrasco, Violeta, Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul, Verdonk, Loes, Prokop, Gundula, Wall, David, Francis, Nancy, Laszlo, Peter, and Löbmann, Michael T.
- Abstract
Healthy soil is vital for our wellbeing and wealth. However, increasing demand for food and biomass may lead to unsustainable soil and land management practices that threaten soils. Other degradation processes such as soil sealing also endanger soil resources. Identifying and accessing the best available knowledge is crucial to address related sustainability issues and promote the needed transition towards sustainable soil and land management practices. Such knowledge has to cover all knowledge domains, system knowledge, target knowledge, and transformation knowledge. However, a comprehensive overview of existing research addressing societal needs related to soil is still missing, which hinders the identification of knowledge gaps. This study provides a detailed analysis of scientific literature to identify ongoing research activities and trends. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of scientific literature related to sustainable soil and land management was conducted. A systems-oriented analytical framework was used that combines soil and land related societal challenges with related knowledge domains. Our analysis revealed a significant increase in scientific publications and related interest in soil and land use-related research, above the average increase of publications within all scientific fields. Different forms of reduction and remediation of soil degradation processes (e.g. erosion, contamination) have been studied most extensively. Other topic areas like land take mitigation, soil biodiversity increase, increase of ecosystem services provision and climate change mitigation and adaption seem to be rather recent concerns, less investigated. We could highlight the importance of context-specific research, as different regions require different practices. For instance, boreal, tropical, karst and peatland regions were less studied. Furthermore, we found that diversifying soil management practices such as agroforestry or including livestock into arable syste
- Published
- 2023
30. Predictive model of soil molecular microbial biomass
- Author
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Horrigue, Walid, Dequiedt, Samuel, Chemidlin Prévost-Bouré, Nicolas, Jolivet, Claudy, Saby, Nicolas P.A., Arrouays, Dominique, Bispo, Antonio, Maron, Pierre-Alain, and Ranjard, Lionel
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Vers le développement de normes pour l'évaluation des services écosystémiques fournis par les sols
- Author
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Bispo, Antonio, Grand, Cécile, Hellal, Jennifer, Pandard, Pascal, Mougin, Christian, Lhuillery, Caroline, Brossard, Michel, Calvaruso, Christophe, Cousin, Isabelle, Info&Sols (Info&Sols), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Agence de l'Environnement et de la Maîtrise de l'Energie (ADEME), Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM) (BRGM), Institut National de l'Environnement Industriel et des Risques (INERIS), Ecologie fonctionnelle et écotoxicologie des agroécosystèmes (ECOSYS), AgroParisTech-Université Paris-Saclay-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Normalisation, Industry and Environment, Association Française de Normalisation (AFNOR), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD), Ecosustain, and AFES
- Subjects
norme ,AFNOR ,pédologie ,[SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil study - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2023
32. Design of a high-resolution and dynamic soil organic carbon monitoring system for agricultural land
- Author
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Chenu, Claire, Ruyschaert, Greet, Ceschia, Eric, Don, Axel, Egmond, Fenny Van, Bispo, Antonio, Thorsoe, Martin, Reynders, Suzanne, Fantappiè, Maria, Ecologie fonctionnelle et écotoxicologie des agroécosystèmes (ECOSYS), AgroParisTech-Université Paris-Saclay-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Research Institute for Agricultural, Fisheries and Food (ILVO), Centre d'études spatiales de la biosphère (CESBIO), Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Université Toulouse III - Paul Sabatier (UT3), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Observatoire Midi-Pyrénées (OMP), Université de Toulouse (UT)-Université de Toulouse (UT)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Centre National d'Études Spatiales [Toulouse] (CNES)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Météo-France -Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Thünen Institute, Wageningen Environmental Research (Alterra), Info&Sols (Info&Sols), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Aarhus University [Aarhus], Services déconcentrés d'appui à la recherche Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur (SDAR Paca), Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e l’analisi dell’economia agraria = Council for Agricultural Research and Economics (CREA), and EJP Soil
- Subjects
algorithm ,Soil organic carbon ,[SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil study - Published
- 2023
33. Biogeography of Soil Bacterial Networks along a Gradient of Cropping Intensity
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Karimi, Battle, Dequiedt, Samuel, Terrat, Sébastien, Jolivet, Claudy, Arrouays, Dominique, Wincker, Patrick, Cruaud, Corinne, Bispo, Antonio, Chemidlin Prévost-Bouré, Nicolas, and Ranjard, Lionel
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Sustainable soil and land management: a systemsoriented overview of scientific literature.
- Author
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Mason, Eloïse, Bispo, Antonio, Matt, Mireille, Helming, Katharina, Rodriguez, Elena, Lansac, Rocio, Carrasco, Violeta, Hashar, Mohammad Rafiul, Verdonk, Loes, Prokop, Gundula, Wall, David, Francis, Nancy, Laszlo, Peter, and Löbmann, Michael T.
- Abstract
Healthy soil is vital for our wellbeing and wealth. However, increasing demand for food and biomass may lead to unsustainable soil and land management practices that threaten soils. Other degradation processes such as soil sealing also endanger soil resources. Identifying and accessing the best available knowledge is crucial to address related sustainability issues and promote the needed transition towards sustainable soil and land management practices. Such knowledge has to cover all knowledge domains, system knowledge, target knowledge, and transformation knowledge. However, a comprehensive overview of existing research addressing societal needs related to soil is still missing, which hinders the identification of knowledge gaps. This study provides a detailed analysis of scientific literature to identify ongoing research activities and trends. A quantitative and qualitative analysis of scientific literature related to sustainable soil and land management was conducted. A systems-oriented analytical framework was used that combines soil and land related societal challenges with related knowledge domains. Our analysis revealed a significant increase in scientific publications and related interest in soil and land use-related research, above the average increase of publications within all scientific fields. Different forms of reduction and remediation of soil degradation processes (e.g. erosion, contamination) have been studied most extensively. Other topic areas like land take mitigation, soil biodiversity increase, increase of ecosystem services provision and climate change mitigation and adaption seem to be rather recent concerns, less investigated. We could highlight the importance of context-specific research, as different regions require different practices. For instance, boreal, tropical, karst and peatland regions were less studied. Furthermore, we found that diversifying soil management practices such as agroforestry or including livestock into arable systems are valuable options for increasing biomass, mitigating/adapting to climate change, and improving soil related ecosystem services. A recent trend towards the latter research topic indicates the transition from a soil conservation-oriented perspective to a soil serviceoriented perspective, which may be better suited to integrate the social and economic dimensions of soil health improvement alongside the ecological dimension. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Handbook to establish a large-scale soil biodiversity monitoring: the French experience of the RMQS-Biodiversity
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Imbert, Camille, primary, Santorufo, Lucia, additional, Ortega, Carole, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Auclerc, Apolline, additional, Bougon, Nolwenn, additional, Capowiez, Yvan, additional, Chauvel, Bruno, additional, Cheviron, Nathalie, additional, Cluzeau, Daniel, additional, Cortet, Jérôme, additional, Hedde, Mickael, additional, Lévêque, Antoine, additional, Maunoury-Danger, Florence, additional, Mougin, Christian, additional, Palka, Laurent, additional, Pérès, Guénola, additional, Ranjard, Lionel, additional, Villenave, Cécile, additional, and Bispo, Antonio, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Complementarity and drivers of thermal and physical soil organic carbon fractions at the scale of mainland France
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Delahaie, Amicie, primary, Cécillon, Lauric, additional, Chenu, Claire, additional, Arrouays, Dominique, additional, Boulonne, Line, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Ratié, Céline, additional, Saby, Nicolas, additional, Stojanova, Marija, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Martin, Manuel, additional, Arbelet, Pierre, additional, Heinonsalo, Jussi, additional, Poeplau, Christopher, additional, Karhu, Kristiina, additional, Roudier, Pierre, additional, Abiven, Samuel, additional, Pacini, Lorenza, additional, and Barré, Pierre, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. First glance of French soil contamination by pesticide residues and the interest for broad-scale monitoring
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Froger, Claire, primary, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Budzinski, Hélène, additional, Pierdet, Manon, additional, Caria, Giovanni, additional, Saby, Nicolas P.A., additional, Arrouays, Dominique, additional, and Bispo, Antonio, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Semantics about soil organic carbon storage: DATA4C+, a comprehensive thesaurus and classification of management practices in agriculture and forestry
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Fujisaki, Kenji, primary, Chevallier, Tiphaine, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Laurent, Jean-Baptiste, additional, Thevenin, François, additional, Chapuis-Lardy, Lydie, additional, Cardinael, Rémi, additional, Le Bas, Christine, additional, Freycon, Vincent, additional, Bénédet, Fabrice, additional, Blanfort, Vincent, additional, Brossard, Michel, additional, Tella, Marie, additional, and Demenois, Julien, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. First National References of Microplasticcontamination of French Soils
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Palazot, Maialen, primary, Soccalingame, Lata, additional, Froger, Claire, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Kedzierski, Mikael, additional, and Bruzaud, Stéphane, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Knowedge needs and gaps on soil and land management
- Author
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Mason, Eloïse, Löbmann, Michael, Matt, Mireille, Sharif, Ibrat, Maring, Linda, Ittner, Sophie, and Bispo, Antonio
- Abstract
Soil health is vital for many ecosystem services. The Horizon Europe (HE) Mission “A Soil Deal for Europe” aims to accelerate the transition to sustainable soil and land management and healthy soils through an am-bitious transdisciplinary research and innovation (R&I) programme, largely based on actor engagement, Liv-ing Labs and Lighthouses. The H2020 Soil Mission Support (SMS) project supported the implementation of the HE Mission, and aimed to improve the coordination of R&I on sustainable soil and land management. Through a co-creation process together with actors, SMS collated available knowledge, actors R&I needs and identified R&I gaps that need to be addressed for successful transition towards sustainable soil and land management. The first step was to identify existing R&I knowledge through a keyword-based analysis of scientific literature published and peer reviewed, related to sustainable soil and land management. The literature analysis ad-dressed the full range of societal challenges, soil health objectives, land use types and knowledge domains necessary to capture the socio-ecological complexity of soil health. Covering some 15,700 scientific articles, this literature analysis represents the current peer reviewed knowledge stock on sustainable soil and land management. A textual analysis using the digital platform CorTexT was undertaken to explore the identified literature and submitted to project consortium internal experts, who analysed and processed the collected information of their respective area of expertise (Annex III). The literature analysis revealed that the societal challenges “reduce soil degradation” and “improve disaster control” have been studied extensively. Con-versely, the societal challenges “mitigate land take” and “increase biodiversity” and the knowledge domains “science-based policy support” and “awareness, training & education” are less discussed. Factsheets present-ing the results of the literature analysis per societal challenge were developed and can be found in Annex VIII. Note that as the key-word based literature search was limited to Scopus-indexed scientific journals, other publishing formats such as conference papers, books, book chapters, non-digitalized articles, grey literature, reports, patents, etc., may be underrepresented or not included in the used data base. The exclusive use of Scopus-indexed scientific articles provided quality insurance of the material through the publication peer-review system. Nonetheless, important documents and knowledge have been incorporated by the consor-tium experts when analysing the collected literature. The second step was to consult actors through online workshops and surveys in order to gain a practice-oriented ‘real-life’ picture of current knowledge and R&I needs for swift implementation of sustainable soil and land management. This step was seen as complementary of the published and peer-reviewed literature. Finally, after exploring our stocktaking of R&I from existing knowledge evidenced by literature review and the actor’s knowledge needs identified from actor consultations, we identified R&I gaps. The main knowledge gaps across all Mission Objectives were of socio-economic nature: drivers and causes of land degradation, knowledge management, governance and policies for inciting improved management, and interaction with other sectors are not sufficiently understood. Second, the HE Missions’ focus on improving soil literacy was supported by the literature analysis and by the actor consultation, which both revealed knowledge gaps re-lated to education and capacity building in all land use types and domains affecting soil health: production, consumption, trade, policy and governance. Thirdly, there is a gap in the long-term implementation of a new mode of knowledge co-design, where researchers and practitioners together develop solutions for sustaina-ble soil and land management in a real-world context. The HE Missions’ focus on Living Labs and Lighthouses has the potential to close this gap. Finally, there is a need to define several concepts (e.g. soil health, soil degradation, footprint). Such definitions should be shared and will be a basis to identify relevant indicators and respective thresholds, and to develop guidelines to support monitoring programmes in order to translate knowledge into evidence for decision making. The outcome of the deliverable is a list of validated R&I gaps across all Mission Objectives which will feed into the SMS roadmap and the HE Mission.
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. La offerta del GIS Sol en apoyo de las cuestiones de salud : Los datos disponibles y su utilización para las políticas públicas y la investigación
- Author
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Froger, Claire, Pelfrêne, A., Volatier, J.-L., Roussel, H., Marot, F., Saby, Nicolas P. A., Bispo, Antonio, Brunet, Jean-François, Info&Sols (Info&Sols), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Laboratoire de Génie Civil et Géo-Environnement (LGCgE) - ULR 4515 (LGCgE), Université d'Artois (UA)-Université de Lille-Ecole nationale supérieure Mines-Télécom Lille Douai (IMT Lille Douai), Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT)-Institut Mines-Télécom [Paris] (IMT)-JUNIA (JUNIA), Université catholique de Lille (UCL)-Université catholique de Lille (UCL), Agence nationale de sécurité sanitaire de l'alimentation, de l'environnement et du travail (ANSES), Agence de l'Environnement et de la Maîtrise de l'Energie (ADEME), and Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières (BRGM) (BRGM)
- Subjects
Francia ,reporting ,contaminantes orgánicos ,organic contaminant ,valores de referencia ,Sol ,élément trace ,GIS Sol ,trace element ,santé humaine ,[SDV.SA.SDS]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Agricultural sciences/Soil study ,human health ,Suelos ,valeur de référence ,Soil ,salud humana ,contamina-ción ,contaminant organique ,elementos traza ,pollution ,France - Abstract
International audience; Soil pollution by inorganic and/or organic contaminants can impact human health through di-rect adsorption or indirect pathways and needs to be considered in public health policies. The Scientific Group of Interest in soil (i.e. GIS Sol in French) is in charge of soil survey and monitor-ing programs at national scale to collect and manage soil data, including data on contaminants. Soil quality databases has been used in public health policies and research programs on the links between soil pollution and human health. This article purpose is to expose the GIS Sol da-tabases available on soil pollution and to present some of the applications using those datasets for public policies and research programs. Soil data were processed to produce a set of national indicators for polluted site management and also to define threshold values for fertilizers pro-duction based on population exposure to cadmium. Soil data were also used in various research projects dealing with arsenic bioaccessibility, the risk induced by polycyclic aromatic hydrocar-bon in soil for local populations or environmental inequalities due to the territorial differences in population exposure to contaminants. In addition, collecting new data on other pollutants (e.g. microplastics, PFAS, pesticides, drugs) is essential to fully integrate soil into a holistic vi-sion of health (“One Health” concept).; Los suelos pueden afectar a nuestra salud, ya que presentan elementos o moléculas que, por absorción directa o indirecta, pueden provocar efectos nocivos. El Grupo de Interés Científico Suelo (GIS Sol) dirige programas de adquisición de datos sobre los suelos, especialmente sobre los contaminantes, y es responsable de su gestión, tratamiento y difusión. Desde su creación, se movilizaron los datos del GIS Sol para apoyar las políticas públicas nacionales y las investi-gaciones sobre la relación entre salud y contaminación de los suelos. El objetivo de este artículo es presentar las bases de datos del GIS Sol disponibles que identifican diferentes contami-nantes en los suelos y detallar varios usos de estos datos en el marco de trabajos sobre la salud humana o en apoyo de políticas nacionales sanitarias. Entre las diferentes aplicaciones, se utili-zaron los datos, en particular, para producir indicadores estadísticos nacionales para la gestión de los sitios y suelos contaminados o para ayudar a definir umbrales reglamentarios de produc-ción de fertilizantes en relación con la exposición de la población al cadmio. También se pre-sentan varios proyectos de investigación que utilizan estos datos de suelos, en particular sobre la bioaccesibilidad del arsénico, la evaluación de los riesgos sanitarios relacionados con la pre-sencia de hidrocarburos aromáticos policíclicos o la evaluación de las desigualdades medioam-bientales. Como complemento de los trabajos existentes, la capitalización y la adquisición de nuevos datos sobre otros contaminantes (e.g. microplásticos, PFAS, plaguicidas, medicamen-tos) es capital para integrar plenamente el estado de los suelos en una visión holística de la salud (concepto «One Health»).; Les sols peuvent impacter notre santé car ils présentent des éléments ou des molécules qui, par absorption directe ou indirecte, peuvent entrainer des effets néfastes. Le groupement d’intérêt scientifique Sol (GIS Sol) pilote des programmes d’acquisition de données sur les sols, notamment sur les contaminants, et est responsable de leur gestion, leur traitement et leur diffusion. Les données du GIS Sol ont été, depuis sa création, mobilisées pour appuyer les politiques publiques nationales et les travaux de recherche traitant du lien entre santé et pollution des sols. Cet article a pour objectif de présenter les bases de données du GIS Sol disponibles répertoriant différents contaminants dans les sols et de détailler plusieurs utilisations de ces données dans le cadre de travaux sur la santé humaine ou en appui de politiques nationales sanitaires. Parmi les différentes applications, les données ont notamment été utilisées afin de produire des indicateurs statistiques nationaux pour la gestion des sites et sols pollués ou encore pour aider à définir des seuils réglementaires de production d’engrais en lien avec l’exposition au cadmium de la population. Plusieurs projets de recherche utilisant ces données sols sont également présentés, traitant notamment de la bioaccessibilité de l’arsenic, de l’évaluation des risques sanitaires liés à la présence d’hydrocarbures aromatiques polycycliques ou encore l’évaluation des inégalités environnementales. En complément des travaux existants, la capitalisation et l’acquisition de nouvelles données sur d’autres polluants (e.g. microplastiques, PFAS, pesticides, médicaments) sont capitales pour intégrer pleinement l’état des sols dans une vision holistique de la santé (concept « One Health »).
- Published
- 2023
42. Intérêt de la normalisation de méthodes pour la recherche publique et la société
- Author
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Mougin, Christian, Cheviron, Nathalie, Bispo, Antonio, Martin-Laurent, Fabrice, Proix, Nicolas, and Mougin, Christian
- Subjects
[SDE] Environmental Sciences - Published
- 2023
43. Le rayonnement et les actions significatives du GIS Sol à l’international
- Author
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Arrouays, Dominique, Bispo, Antonio, Bardy, Marion, Laroche, Bertrand, Laville, Patricia, Le Bas, Christine, Saby, Nicolas P. A., Ratié, Céline, Martin, Manuel P, Jolivet, Claudy, Richer-De-Forges, Anne C, Antoni, Véronique, Joassard, Irénée, Feix, Isabelle, Brossard, Michel, Lagacherie, Philippe, Soussana, Jean-Francois, InfoSol (InfoSol), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Ministère de l'Agriculture et de la Souveraineté Alimentaire (MASA), ministère de la Transition écologique et de la Cohésion des territoires (MTECT), Agence de la Transition écologique (ADEME), Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes (UMR Eco&Sols), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro), Laboratoire d'étude des Interactions Sol - Agrosystème - Hydrosystème (UMR LISAH), and Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier
- Subjects
rapportage ,Sols ,GIS Sol ,[SDU.STU]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences ,France ,rayonnement international - Abstract
International audience; Les sols sont au carrefour d'enjeux planétaires majeurs. L'importance d'une gestion raisonnée et durable des sols est ainsi de plus en plus reconnue au niveau mondial. Il en est logiquement de même en ce qui concerne la nécessité de constituer des systèmes d'information harmonisés, locaux, nationaux, continentaux et mondiaux sur les sols et leurs propriétés. Dans cet article, nous décrivons les évolutions internationales pour lesquelles nous considérons que le GIS Sol a joué un rôle important, tant pour le développement de produits de démonstration, qu'en matière de collaboration, d'initiation, de formation, ou de coordination d'actions internationales. Dans cet article, nous illustrons tout d'abord comment les actions du GIS Sol et de ses partenaires ont contribué au développement de systèmes d'information et au soutien à des infrastructures étrangères, européennes ou mondiales. Nous montrons ensuite ses actions les plus marquantes en matière de développement et de structuration de la recherche et du renforcement du leadership scientifique de la France en bases de données, cartographie et surveillance des sols. Enfin, nous illustrons l’implication du GIS Sol au niveau des politiques et des rapportages européens et mondiaux sur les sols et des actions de normalisation internationales. Ces illustrations indiquent clairement que ses programmes pionniers, originaux, inspirants et complémentaires, ont pesé fortement sur le rayonnement du GIS Sol à l’international
- Published
- 2022
44. A European roadmap on soil and land management
- Author
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Ittner, Sophie, Naumann, Sandra, Bispo, Antonio, Wall, David, Mason, Eloïse, Ellen, Gerald Jan, Prokop, Gundula, Brils, Jos, Helming, Katharina, Nougues, Laura, Maring, Linda, Doherty, Mary Kate, Löbmann, Michael, and Keesstra, Saskia
- Abstract
Soil health is vital for many ecosystem services and crucial for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and the European Green Deal's goals. The Horizon Europe (HE) Mission “A Soil Deal for Europe” aims to accelerate the transition to sustainable soil and land management, and healthy soils through an ambitious transdisciplinary research and innovation (R&I) programme, largely based on actor engagement, Living Labs and Lighthouses. The H2020 Soil Mission Support (SMS) project supports the implementation of the HE Mission and aims to improve the coordination of R&I on sustainable soil and land management. Through a co-creation process together with actors, SMS collates available knowledge, actors R&I needs and identifies R&I gaps that need to be addressed for successful transition towards sustainable soil and land management. The presented R&I roadmap on soils and land management is a strategic document outlining the actions and the pathway to address R&I needs from different actors and sectors, as well as societal challenges. The roadmap presents the most important R&I knowledge gaps for each Soil Mission Objective, which were iden-tified in collaboration with stakeholders from all relevant sectors and based on the key findings of the project. To ensure that the R&I elements of the roadmap can effectively contribute to the desired transformation of land and soil management, the impact pathways approach was chosen as the analytical framework. The im-pact pathways are key component of the roadmap and describe several research actions that should be taken up to address the knowledge gaps and show what results we can expect from these actions that will lead to a short, medium- and finally long-term impact. The results show that to reach the eight Mission Objectives a common understanding of soil health is needed, as well as research and innovation in both natural sciences as well as social and economic spheres. The actions identified in the roadmap should be closely integrated. Future projects should focus more on finding systemic approaches to highlight synergies and minimise or avoid trade-offs while addressing the individual soil mission objectives.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Elemental stoichiometry and Rock-Eval® thermal stability of organic matter in French topsoils
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Delahaie, Amicie A., primary, Barré, Pierre, additional, Baudin, François, additional, Arrouays, Dominique, additional, Bispo, Antonio, additional, Boulonne, Line, additional, Chenu, Claire, additional, Jolivet, Claudy, additional, Martin, Manuel P., additional, Ratié, Céline, additional, Saby, Nicolas P. A., additional, Savignac, Florence, additional, and Cécillon, Lauric, additional
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Use of Multicriteria Analysis for Selecting Ecotoxicity Tests
- Author
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Devillers, James, Pandard, Pascal, Charissou, Anne-Marie, Bispo, Antonio, and Devillers, James, editor
- Published
- 2009
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47. Biogeographical patterns of the soil fungal: bacterial ratio across France.
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Djemiel, Christophe, Dequiedt, Samuel, Bailly, Arthur, Tripied, Julie, Lelièvre, Mélanie, Horrigue, Walid, Jolivet, Claudy, Bispo, Antonio, Saby, Nicolas, Valé, Matthieu, Maron, Pierre-Alain, Ranjard, Lionel, and Terrat, Sébastien
- Published
- 2023
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48. Unraveling biogeographical patterns and environmental drivers of soil fungal diversity at the French national scale.
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Djemiel, Christophe, Dequiedt, Samuel, Horrigue, Walid, Bailly, Arthur, Lelièvre, Mélanie, Tripied, Julie, Guilland, Charles, Perrin, Solène, Comment, Gwendoline, Saby, Nicolas, Jolivet, Claudy, Bispo, Antonio, Boulonne, Line, Pierart, Antoine, Wincker, Patrick, Cruaud, Corinne, Maron, Pierre-Alain, Terrat, Sébastien, and Ranjard, Lionel
- Subjects
SOIL ecology ,FOREST soils ,SOILS ,SURFACE of the earth ,SOIL sampling ,SOIL microbiology - Abstract
The fungal kingdom is among the most diversified kingdoms on earth with estimations up to 12 million species. Yet, it remains poorly understood with only 150,000 fungal species currently described. Given the major ecological role of fungi in ecosystem functioning, these numbers stress the importance of investigating fungal diversity description across different ecosystem types. Here, we explored the spatial distribution of the soil fungal diversity on a broad geographical scale, using the French Soil Quality Monitoring Network that covers the whole French territory (2,171 soils sampled along a systematic grid). Fungal alpha-diversity was assessed directly from soil DNA using a metabarcoding approach. Total cumulated fungal diversity across France included 136,219 OTUs, i.e., about 1 % of the global soil fungal diversity for a territory representing only 0.3 % of terrestrial surface on Earth. Based on this dataset, the first extensive map of fungal alpha-diversity was drawn and evidenced a heterogeneous and spatially structured distribution in large biogeographical patterns of 231 km radius for richness (Hill number q=0) and smaller patterns of 36 km radius for dominant fungi (Hill number q=2). As related to other environmental parameters, the spatial distribution of fungal diversity was mainly influenced by local filters such as soil characteristics and land management, but also by global filters such as climate conditions. The spatial distribution of abundant and rare fungi was determined by distinct or similar filters with various relative influences. Interestingly, cropped soils exhibited the highest pool of fungal diversity relatively to forest and vineyard soils. In complement, soil fungal OTUs network interactions were calculated under the different land uses across France. They varied hugely and showed a loss of 75 % of the complexity in crop systems and grasslands compared to forests, and up to 83 % in vineyard systems. Overall, our study revealed that a nation-wide survey with a high spatial resolution approach is relevant to deeply investigate the spatial distribution and determinism of soil fungal diversity. Our findings provide novel insights for a better understanding of soil fungal ecology and upgrade biodiversity conservation policies by supplying representative repositories dedicated to soil microorganisms in a context of global change. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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49. Adding a soil biodiversity monitoring to the French National Soil Quality Monitoring Network :the RMQS-Biodiversity
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Imbert, Camille, Santorufo, Lucia, Ortega, Carole, Jolivet, Claudy, Auclerc, Appoline, Bougon, Nolwenn, Capowiez, Yvan, Cheviron, Nathalie, Cluzeau, Daniel, Cortet, Jérôme, Deronzier, Gaëlle, Hedde, Mickael, Lévêque, Antoine, Maunoury-Danger, Florence, Mougin, Christian, Palka, Laurent, Pérès, Guénola, Ranjard, Lionel, Roucaute, Marc, Vanhee, Benoît, Villenave, Cécile, Wroza, Stanislas, Bispo, Antonio, InfoSol (InfoSol), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Université de Naples, Université de Lorraine (UL), Office français de la biodiversité (OFB), Environnement Méditerranéen et Modélisation des Agro-Hydrosystèmes (EMMAH), Avignon Université (AU)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Ecologie fonctionnelle et écotoxicologie des agroécosystèmes (ECOSYS), AgroParisTech-Université Paris-Saclay-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Plateforme BIOCHEM-ENV, Ecosystèmes, biodiversité, évolution [Rennes] (ECOBIO), Université de Rennes (UR)-Institut Ecologie et Environnement (INEE), Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Observatoire des Sciences de l'Univers de Rennes (OSUR), Université de Rennes (UR)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université de Rennes 2 (UR2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS)-Université de Rennes 2 (UR2)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Centre d’Ecologie Fonctionnelle et Evolutive (CEFE), Université Paul-Valéry - Montpellier 3 (UPVM)-École Pratique des Hautes Études (EPHE), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Université de Montpellier (UM), Ecologie fonctionnelle et biogéochimie des sols et des agro-écosystèmes (UMR Eco&Sols), Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement (Cirad)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Montpellier, Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro)-Institut national d'enseignement supérieur pour l'agriculture, l'alimentation et l'environnement (Institut Agro), Patrimoine naturel (PatriNat), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Office français de la biodiversité (OFB), Centre d'Ecologie et des Sciences de la COnservation (CESCO), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle (MNHN)-Sorbonne Université (SU)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), Sol Agro et hydrosystème Spatialisation (SAS), Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Rennes Angers, Agroécologie [Dijon], Université de Bourgogne (UB)-Université Bourgogne Franche-Comté [COMUE] (UBFC)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE)-Institut Agro Dijon, Université catholique de Lille (UCL), Elisol Environnement, and Mougin, Christian
- Subjects
[SDE] Environmental Sciences ,[SDV] Life Sciences [q-bio] ,[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio] ,[SDE]Environmental Sciences ,Earthworms - Abstract
International audience
- Published
- 2022
50. The impact of agricultural practices on soil biota: A regional study
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Ponge, Jean-François, Pérès, Guénola, Guernion, Muriel, Ruiz-Camacho, Nuria, Cortet, Jérôme, Pernin, Céline, Villenave, Cécile, Chaussod, Rémi, Martin-Laurent, Fabrice, Bispo, Antonio, and Cluzeau, Daniel
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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