453-1 Changing Soil Science to Understand Soil Change and Ecosystem Services.
See more from this Division: SSSA Division: Soils & Environmental QualitySee more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Change: Agronomic, Ecological, and Pedologic Process Measurements and Modeling: Title: I
Limitations of the SNA in relation to the environment and depletion of natural resources have led to the development by the UN of the 2003 System of Environmental and Economic Accounts (SEEA). The approach articulated within the SEEA is not to explicitly include monetary estimates of environmental damage (such as soil erosion) and resource use in accounts. Instead the SEEA advocate disaggregated, issue specific “satellite” accounts that sit beside the existing SNA that capture resource use and environmental degradation. With regard to soils, SEEA has proposed initially capturing the change in area and volume of soil that can operate as a biological system under different land uses. Although area losses clearly represent degradation of the resource, the loss of soil thickness due to erosion is a rather crude degradation measure, not least because of preferential loss of biologically active soil components. The accounts currently make no attempt to assess soil condition or how this affects the supply of ecosystem services.
We present data from UK and European initiatives to develop monitoring and modelling frameworks that allow us to better understand the state and change of soils. For example, the Countryside Survey in the UK attempts to measure the state and change of the British countryside and has operated for 30 years; and a similar effort (GMEP) is now being undertaken in Wales to monitor the impact of agri-environmental schemes. Initiatives such as the EU SoilTrEC project are developing capacity to predict effects on water and solute fluxes of soil structural changes induced by climate and management. All these efforts seek to identify and quantify soil change on anthropogenic time scales and provide decision-makers with an understanding of how ecosystem service delivery will be affected.
See more from this Session: Symposium--Soil Change: Agronomic, Ecological, and Pedologic Process Measurements and Modeling: Title: I