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What We Talk about When We Talk about Soil Health
Author(s) -
Stewart Ryan D.,
Jian Jinshi,
Gyawali Ayush J.,
Thomason Wade E.,
Badgley Brian D.,
Reiter Mark S.,
Strickland Michael S.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
agricultural and environmental letters
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.681
H-Index - 12
ISSN - 2471-9625
DOI - 10.2134/ael2018.06.0033
Subject(s) - environmental science , standardization , cropping , soil health , consistency (knowledge bases) , sampling (signal processing) , soil water , environmental resource management , computer science , geography , soil science , soil organic matter , telecommunications , agriculture , archaeology , artificial intelligence , detector , operating system
Core Ideas Despite nationwide emphasis on soil health in the USA, current measurements lack consistency. A meta‐analysis showed 8 of 42 soil health indicators reported >20% of time. Only 13 indicators showed short‐term (1–3 yr timescale) responses to cover cropping. Wide variation in soil sampling protocols suggests standardization is needed. Translating soil health research across systems requires a common framework.Despite a nationwide emphasis on improving soil health in the United States, current measurement protocols have little consistency. To survey assessment practices, we conducted a meta‐analysis of cover crop ( n = 86) and no‐tillage ( n = 106) studies and compiled reported indicators, cropping systems, and soil sampling protocols from each. We then analyzed which indicators significantly responded to cover crop usage after 1 yr and 2 to 3 yr. Our results showed that out of 42 indicators, only 8 were reported in >20% of studies. Thirteen indicators showed >10% relative response after 1 to 3 yr; the remainder lacked either sufficient observations or consistent results. Looking forward, we propose that emphasis should be placed on (i) pursuing dynamic indicators (e.g., aggregate stability), (ii) standardizing sampling protocols, and (iii) developing a common framework for information sharing. These efforts will generate new insight into soil health across systems, ultimately ensuring that soil health science is useful to producers and regulators.

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