Assessment of environmental susceptibility/vulnerability of soils

Authors

  • György Várallyay Research Institute for Soil Science and Agricutural Chemistry (RISSAC) of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H–1022 Budapest, Herman O. út 15.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.56617/tl.4613

Keywords:

environmental susceptibility/vulnerability, soil functions, control of soil processes, soil stresses, limiting factors of soil fertility

Abstract

Soils represent a considerable part of the natural resources of Hungary. Consequently, rational land use and proper soil management – to guarantee normal soil functions – are important elements of sustainable (agricultural) development, having special importance both in the national economy and in environment protection. The main soil functions in the biosphere are as follows: conditionally renewable natural resource; reactor, transformer and integrator of the combined influences of other natural resources (solar radiation, atmosphere, surface and subsurface waters, biological resources), place of „sphere-interactions“; medium for biomass production, primary food-source of the biosphere; storage of heat, water and plant nutrients; natural filter and detoxication system, which may prevent the deeper geological formations and the subsurface waters from various pollutants; high capacity buffer medium, which may prevent or moderate the unfavourable consequences of various environmental stresses; significant gene-reservoir, an important element of biodiversity. Society utilizes these functions in different ways (rate, method, efficiency) throughout history, depending on the given natural conditions and socio-economic circumstances. In many cases the character of the particular functions was not properly taken into consideration during the utilization of soil resources, and the misguided management resulted in their over-exploitation, decreasing efficiency of one or more soil functions, and – over a certain limit – serious environmental deterioration.
Soil resources are threatened by the following environmental stresses:
- soil degradation processes,
- extreme moisture regime,
- nutrient stresses (deficiency or toxicity),
- environmental pollution.
Environmental stresses caused by natural factors or human activities represent an increasing ecological threat to the biosphere, as well as a socio-economic risk for sustainable development, including rational land use and soil management.
- The stresses are caused by the integrated impacts of various soil properties, which are the results of soil processes (mass and energy regimes, abiotic and biotic transport and transformation and their interactions) under the combined influences of soil forming factors. Consequently, the control of soil processes is a great challenge and the main task of soil science and soil management in sustainable development.
- The efficient control of these processes necessitates the following consecutive steps:
- registration of facts and consequences (information on land and soil characteristics, land use, cropping pattern, applied agrotechnics, yields, with their spatial and temporal variability),
- evaluation of potential reasons (definition and quantification of soil processes, analysis of influencing
- factors and their mechanisms),
- assessment of the theoretical, real, rational and economic possibilities for the control of soil processes (including their risk-assessment and impact analysis),
- elaboration of efficient technologies for the „best” control alternatives (best management practice).
Scientifically based planning and implementation of sustainable land use and rational soil management to ensure desirable soil functions, without any undesirable environmental side-effects, require adequate soil information. In the last years such data were organized into a computer-based GIS soil database in Hungary, giving opportunities for the quantification, analysis, modelling and forecasting of the studied environmental stresses and for the efficient and scientifically based prevention, elimination or reduction of environmental stresses and their unfavourable ecological and economical consequences.
Special attention was paid to the assessment of various soil degradation processes, as: (1) soil erosion by water or wind; (2) soil acidification; (3) salinization and/or alkalization; (4) physical degradation (structure destruction, compaction); (5) extreme moisture regime: drought sensitivity and waterlogging hazard; (6) biological degradation; (7) unfavourable changes in the plant nutrient regime; (8) decrease of natural buffering capacity, (9) soil (and water) pollution.
The actions against undesirable environmental stresses and their unfavourable consequences are important elements of sustainable, efficient, economically viable, socially acceptable and environmentally sound crop production and agricultural development. These are joint tasks of the state, decision makers on various levels, the land owners, the land users and – to a certain extent – of each member of the society.

Author Biography

  • György Várallyay, Research Institute for Soil Science and Agricutural Chemistry (RISSAC) of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, H–1022 Budapest, Herman O. út 15.

    g.varallyay@rissac.hu

References

Batjes N. H., Bridges E. M. 1997: Implementation of a Soil Degradation and Vulnerability Database for Central and Eastern Europe (SOVEUR Project). FAO–ISRIC. Wageningen.

Flachner Zs., Németh T., Tóth R. (szerk.) 2002: A légszennyezés környezeti hatásainak elemzése – elméleti háttér. KÖM–MTA. Budapest.

Kádár I. 1995: A talaj-növény-állat-ember tápláléklánc szennyeződése kémiai elemekkel Magyarországon. KTM–MTA TAKI. Budapest.

Láng I., Csete L. 1992: Alkalmazkodó mezőgazdaság. AGRICOLA. Budapest. Magyarország Nemzeti Atlasza. 1989. Akadémiai Kiadó, Budapest.

Oldeman L. R., Hakeling R. T. A., Sombroek W. G. 1990: World Map of the Status of Human-induced Soil Degradation (GLASOD). ISRIC–UNEP. Wageningen.

Pásztor L., Szabó J., Németh T., Várallyay Gy. 1997. Case study for regional scale soil susceptibility mapping in Hungary. Application of the Hungarian Soil and Terrain Digital Database (HunSOTER). In: Filep Gy. (ed.): Land Use and Soil Management. Agric. Univ. Debrecen. pp. 304–310.

Stefanovits P. 1992: Talajtan. Mezőgazdasági Kiadó, Budapest.

Szabó J., Várallyay Gy., Pásztor L., Suba Zs. 1999: Talajdegradációs folyamatok térképezése országos és regionális szinten térinformatikai és távérzékelési módszerek integrálásával. Agrokémia és Talajtan 48: 3–14.

Szabó J., Pásztor L., Suba Zs., Várallyay Gy. 1998. Integration of remote sensing and GIS techniques in land degradation mapping. Agrokémia és Talajtan 47: 63–75.

Szabolcs I., Várallyay Gy. 1978: A talajok termékenységét gátló tényezők Magyarországon. Agrokémia és Talajtan 27: 181–202.

Szabolcs I., Darab K., Várallyay Gy. 1968: A tiszai öntözőrendszerek és a Magyar Alföld talajainak termékenysége. Agrokémia és Talajtan 17: 453–464. 18: 211–220. 18: 221–234.

Szabolcs I., Darab K., Várallyay Gy. 1969: Methods for the prognosis of salinization and alkalization due to irrigation in the Hungarian Plain. Agrokémia és Talajtan 18: 351–376.

TIM. Talajvédelmi Információs és Monitoring Rendszer, 1995: I. Módszertan. FM Növényvédelmi és Agrárkörnyezetgazdálkodási Főosztály, Budapest.

Várallyay Gy. 1985: Magyarország talajainak vízháztartási és anyagforgalmi típusai. Agrokémia és Talajtan 34: 267–298.

Várallyay Gy. 1989: Soil degradation processes and their control in Hungary. Land Degradation and Rehabilitation 1: 171–188. https://doi.org/10.1002/ldr.3400010302

Várallyay Gy. 1991: Soil vulnerability mapping in Hungary. Proc. Int. Workshop on „Mapping of soil and terrain vulnerability to specified chemical compounds in Europe at a scale of 1:5 M” (Wageningen, March 20–23, 1991) 83–89.

Várallyay Gy. 1996: Magyarország talajainak érzékenysége szerkezetleromlásra és tömörödésre. Környezet- és Tájgazdálkodási Füzetek 2: 15–30.

Várallyay Gy. 1997: A talaj funkciói. Magyar Tudomány. 42: 1414–1430.

Várallyay Gy. 2000a: Talajfolyamatok szabályozásának tudományos megalapozása. In: Székfoglalók, 1995–1998. Magyar Tudományos Akadémia. Budapest. pp. 1–32.

Várallyay Gy. 2000b: Risk assessment and prevention of soil degradation processes in Hungary. In: Cottam, Harvey, Pape, Tait (eds.): Foresight and Precaution. Balkema, Rotterdam. pp. 563–567.

Várallyay G. 2000c: Soil quality in relation to the concepts of multi-functionality and sustainable development. In: Wilson, M. J., Maliszewska-Kordybach, B. (eds.): Soil Quality, Sustainable Agriculture and Environmental Security in Central and Eastern Europe. NATO Sci. Ser. 2. Env. Security. Kluwer Acad. Publishers 69: 17–33. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-4181-9_2

Várallyay Gy. 2001. A talaj vízgazdálkodása és a környezet. Magyar Tudomány. 46: 799–815.

Várallyay Gy. 2002. Magyarország talajainak érzékenysége környezeti hatásokkal szemben. In: Flachner Zs., Németh T., Tóth R. (szerk.): A légszennyezés környezeti htásainak elemzése – elméleti háttér“. KÖM–MTA kiadása. Budapest. pp. 53–63.

Várallyay Gy., Láng I. 2000: A talaj kettős funkciója: természeti erőforrás és termőhely. Debreceni Egyetem Agrártudományi Közlemények 5–19.

Várallyay Gy., Leszták, M. 1990: Susceptibility of soils to physical degradation in Hungary. Soil Technology 3: 289–298. https://doi.org/10.1016/0933-3630(90)90010-Z

Várallyay Gy., Németh T. 1996: A fenntartható mezőgazdaság talajtani–agrokémiai alapjai. MTA Agrártud. Oszt. Tájékoztatója, 1995. Akadémiai Kiadó. Budapest. pp. 80–92.

Várallyay Gy., Rédly L-né Murányi A. 1986: A légköri savas ülepedés hatása a talajra Magyarországon. Időjárás 90: 169–180.

Várallyay Gy., Rédly M., Murányi A. 1989: Map of the susceptibility of soils to acidification in Hungary. Ecological Impacts of Acidification. Proc. Symp. Ecosystems, Oulu, Finland, Nov. 1–4, 1988. Budapest. pp. 79–94.

Várallyay Gy., Szabó J., Pásztor L., Michéli E. 1994: SOTER (Soil and Terrain Digital Database) 1:500 000 and its application in Hungary. Agrokémia és Talajtan 43: 87–108.

Várallyay Gy., Szűcs L., Murányi A., Rajkai K., Zilahy P. 1979: Magyarország termőhelyi adottságait meghatározó talajtani tényezők 1:100 000 méretarányú térképe. I. Agrokémia és Talajtan 28: 363– 384.

Várallyay Gy., Szűcs L., Murányi A., Rajkai K., Zilahy P. 1980: Magyarország termőhelyi adottságait meghatározó tényezők 1:100 000 méretarányú térképe. II. Agrokémia és Talajtan 29: 35–76.

Várallyay Gy., Pásztor L., Szabó J., Bakacsi Zs., 2000: Soil vulnerability assessments in Hungary. “Soil and Terrain Database. Land Degradation Status and Soil Vulnerability Assessment for Central and Eastern Europe”. FAO Land and Water Digital Media Series 10. CD-ROM. FAO. Rome.

Published

2003-07-30

Issue

Section

Tanulmányok, eredeti közlemények

How to Cite

Assessment of environmental susceptibility/vulnerability of soils . (2003). JOURNAL OF LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1(1), 45-62. https://doi.org/10.56617/tl.4613

Similar Articles

1-10 of 392

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Most read articles by the same author(s)