Humusica 2, article 19: Techno humus systems and global change–conservation agriculture and 4/1000 proposal

Zanella, Augusto; Bolzonella, Cristian; Lowenfels, Jeff; Ponge, Jean-François; Bouché, Marcel; Saha, Debasish; Kukal, Surinder Singh; Fritz, Ines; Savory, Allan; Blouin, Manuel; Sartori, Luigi; Tatti, Dylan; Kellermann, Liv Anna; Trachsel, Peter; Burgos, Stéphane; Minasny, Budiman; Fukuoka, Masanobu (2018). Humusica 2, article 19: Techno humus systems and global change–conservation agriculture and 4/1000 proposal Applied Soil Ecology, 122(2), pp. 271-296. Elsevier 10.1016/j.apsoil.2017.10.036

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Philosophy can overlap pedology. It is not casual that life begins and finishes in the soil. We separated the concepts of Humipedon, Copedon and Lithopedon. Some sections were dedicated to the founders of the movement for a new type of agriculture (agroecology). They simply proclaim to accompany the process of natural evolution instead of spending a lot of energy in hunting competitor organisms with pesticides or boosting the soil with mineral fertilisations and tillage. The core of the article is built on a biological concept of soil and shows researches supporting this view. After pointing to the soil structure and illustrating its natural genesis, explaining which cultural conditions may improve its quality, we finished the article with economic considerations, combining at planet level a program of soil restoration with a greenhouse effect mitigation. What a reader should have in mind at the end of the article: soil organisms have a prominent positive influence on soil structure and fertility; their mass is proportional to the soil organic matter quantity; it is possible to contrast the climate warming using the soil as sink of C. We estimated that the Agro Humipedons of a European economically active region could sink about 13 or 20% of its emissions, switching from conventional to minimum or no tillage during the coming 40 years. At planetary level, a well programmed 4 per 1000 action can even be more efficacious and compensate a part of the global greenhouse gas effect.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Resource-efficient agricultural production systems
School of Agricultural, Forest and Food Sciences HAFL > Agriculture

Name:

Zanella, Augusto;
Bolzonella, Cristian;
Lowenfels, Jeff;
Ponge, Jean-François;
Bouché, Marcel;
Saha, Debasish;
Kukal, Surinder Singh;
Fritz, Ines;
Savory, Allan;
Blouin, Manuel;
Sartori, Luigi;
Tatti, Dylan;
Kellermann, Liv Anna;
Trachsel, Peter;
Burgos, Stéphane;
Minasny, Budiman and
Fukuoka, Masanobu

Subjects:

G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GB Physical geography
G Geography. Anthropology. Recreation > GF Human ecology. Anthropogeography
S Agriculture > S Agriculture (General)

ISSN:

09291393

Publisher:

Elsevier

Language:

English

Submitter:

David Zimmer

Date Deposited:

03 Sep 2019 09:10

Last Modified:

03 Sep 2019 09:10

Publisher DOI:

10.1016/j.apsoil.2017.10.036

ARBOR DOI:

10.24451/arbor.8106

URI:

https://arbor.bfh.ch/id/eprint/8106

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