A new version of this entry is available:
Loading...
Article
2022
Soil-improving cropping systems for sustainable and profitable farming in Europe
Soil-improving cropping systems for sustainable and profitable farming in Europe
Hessel, Rudi Wyseure, Guido Panagea, Ioanna S. Alaoui, Abdallah Reed, Mark S. van Delden, Hedwig Muro, Melanie Mills, Jane Oenema, Oene Areal, Francisco van den Elsen, Erik Verzandvoort, Simone Assinck, Falentijn Elsen, Annemie Lipiec, Jerzy Koutroulis, Aristeidis O’Sullivan, Lilian Bolinder, Martin A. Fleskens, Luuk Kandeler, Ellen Montanarella, Luca Heinen, Marius Toth, Zoltan Hallama, Moritz Cuevas, Julián Baartman, Jantiene E. M. Piccoli, Ilaria Dalgaard, Tommy Stolte, Jannes Black, Jasmine E. Chivers, Charlotte-Anne
Abstract (English)
Soils form the basis for agricultural production and other ecosystem services, and soil management should aim at improving their quality and resilience. Within the SoilCare project, the concept of soil-improving cropping systems (SICS) was developed as a holistic approach to facilitate the adoption of soil management that is sustainable and profitable. SICS selected with stakeholders were monitored and evaluated for environmental, sociocultural, and economic effects to determine profitability and sustainability. Monitoring results were upscaled to European level using modelling and Europe-wide data, and a mapping tool was developed to assist in selection of appropriate SICS across Europe. Furthermore, biophysical, sociocultural, economic, and policy reasons for (non)adoption were studied. Results at the plot/farm scale showed a small positive impact of SICS on environment and soil, no effect on sustainability, and small negative impacts on economic and sociocultural dimensions. Modelling showed that different SICS had different impacts across Europe—indicating the importance of understanding local dynamics in Europe-wide assessments. Work on adoption of SICS confirmed the role economic considerations play in the uptake of SICS, but also highlighted social factors such as trust. The project’s results underlined the need for policies that support and enable a transition to more sustainable agricultural practices in a coherent way.
File is subject to an embargo until
This is a correction to:
A correction to this entry is available:
This is a new version of:
Notes
Publication license
Publication series
Published in
Land, 11 (2022), 6, 780.
https://doi.org/10.3390/land11060780.
ISSN: 2073-445X
Faculty
Institute
Examination date
Supervisor
Edition / version
Citation
DOI
ISSN
ISBN
Language
English
Publisher
Publisher place
Classification (DDC)
630 Agriculture
Collections
Original object
Standardized keywords (GND)
Sustainable Development Goals
BibTeX
@article{Hessel2022,
url = {https://hohpublica.uni-hohenheim.de/handle/123456789/16780},
doi = {10.3390/land11060780},
author = {Hessel, Rudi and Wyseure, Guido and Panagea, Ioanna S. et al.},
title = {Soil-Improving Cropping Systems for Sustainable and Profitable Farming in Europe},
journal = {Land},
year = {2022},
volume = {11},
number = {6},
}