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Comparing LUCAS Soil and national systems: Towards a harmonized European Soil monitoring network

Authors :
Claire Froger
Elena Tondini
Dominique Arrouays
Katrien Oorts
Christopher Poeplau
Johanna Wetterlind
Elsa Putku
Nicolas P.A. Saby
Maria Fantappiè
Quentin Styc
Claire Chenu
Joost Salomez
Seth Callewaert
Frédéric M. Vanwindekens
Bruno Huyghebaert
Julien Herinckx
Stefan Heilek
Laura Sofie Harbo
Lucas De Carvalho Gomes
Alberto Lázaro-López
Jose Antonio Rodriguez
Sylwia Pindral
Bożena Smreczak
András Benő
Zsofia Bakacsi
Kees Teuling
Fenny van Egmond
Vladimír Hutár
Boris Pálka
Dominik Abrahám
Antonio Bispo
Source :
Geoderma, Vol 449, Iss , Pp 117027- (2024)
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2024.

Abstract

A recent assessment states that 60–70% of soils in Europe are considered degraded. Protecting such valuable resource require knowledge on soil status through monitoring systems. In Europe, different types of monitoring networks currently exist in parallel. Many EU Member states (MS) developed their own national soil information monitoring system (N-SIMS), some being in place for decades. In parallel in 2009, the European Commission extended the periodic Land Use/Land Cover Area Frame Survey (LUCAS) led by EUROSTAT to sample and analyse the main properties of topsoil in EU in order to develop a homogeneous dataset for EU.Both sources of information are needed to support European policies on soil health evaluation. However, a question remains whether the assessment obtained by using soil properties from both monitoring programs (N-SIMS and LUCAS Soil) are comparable, and what could be the limitations of using either one dataset or the other.Conducted in the context of European Joint Programme (EJP) SOIL, this study shows the results of a comparison between N-SIMS and LUCAS Soil programs among 12 different EU member states including BE, DE, DK, EE, ES, FR, DE, HU, IT, NL, PL, SE and SK. The comparison was done on: (i) the sampling strategies including site densities, land cover and soil type distribution; (ii) the statistical distribution of three soil properties (organic carbon, pH and clay content); (iii) two potential indicators of soil quality (i.e. OC/Clay ratio and pH classes). The results underlined substantial differences in soil properties statistical distributions between N-SIMS and LUCAS Soil in many member states, particularly for woodland and grassland soils, affecting the evaluation of soil health using indicators. Such differences might be explained by both the monitoring strategy and sampling or analytical protocols exposing the potential effect of data source on European and national policies. The results demonstrate the need to work towards data harmonization and in the light of the Soil Monitoring Law, to carefully design the future of soil monitoring in Europe taking into account both LUCAS Soil and N-SIMS considering the significant impact of the monitoring strategies and protocols on soil health indicators.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18726259
Volume :
449
Issue :
117027-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Geoderma
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.1175dade2ac84932a6dcccbb8cf27764
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.geoderma.2024.117027