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Eco-Holistic Soil Conservation to support Land Degradation Neutrality and the Sustainable Development Goals.

Authors :
Albaladejo, Juan
Díaz-Pereira, Elvira
de Vente, Joris
Source :
CATENA. Jan2021, Vol. 196, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

• Successful soil conservation requires a transdisciplinary approach based on EHSC. • EHSC involves participatory diagnosis, monitoring, and assessment of socioecosystems. • EHSC see living-soil central to ecosystem services delivery and urges for soil ethic. • Implementation of soil policy is crucial to guarantee long-term conservation goals. • EHSC emphasizes synergies between soil health, biodiversity and climate change. Soil degradation continues to be of the major threats for sustainable development and human well-being. Despite the advances in research, there is still a gap between research and effective conservation. To fill this gap, a change is needed in the paradigm of soil conservation research. Therefore, this paper aims to: (i) introduce the concept of Eco-Holistic- Soil Conservation (EHSC) to support the Sustainable Development Goals, (ii) present a framework for the implementation of EHSC, and (iii) show practical examples and recommendations of EHSC. The theory behind the concept of EHSC builds on a critical review of the main causes for success or failure of previous conservation projects and evaluation of latest holistic concepts and visions on conservation of soils and socio-ecosystems. The key principles underlying EHSC are: (1) perception of soils as living-systems, (2) holistic ecosystem approach, (3) central role of soil conservation for climate change mitigation and adaptation, and (4) ethical behavior in soil use. Implementation of EHSC requires a transdisciplinary approach involving a range of actions in three iterative phases: (1) diagnosis of the causes and processes of land degradation and the socio-economic context, (2) integrated assessment of the interactions and synergies between the factors and actors involved and the selection of EHSC actions, and (3) participatory evaluation and monitoring of impacts. Successful conservation requires more research on the resilience and adaptation of soils to climate change, integrated economic valuations of soil conservation, and protection of native peoples right to land in international legislation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03418162
Volume :
196
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
CATENA
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
146751418
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.catena.2020.104823