We can't find the internet
Attempting to reconnect
Something went wrong!
Hang in there while we get back on track
The role of soils in delivering Nature's Contributions to People
Summary
This theme-issue synthesis assessed soils' contributions to Nature's Contributions to People across multiple categories, finding that well-managed soils can positively support all ecosystem services but that soil degradation globally undermines these contributions.
This theme issue provides an assessment of the contribution of soils to Nature's Contributions to People (NCP). The papers in this issue show that soils can contribute positively to the delivery of all NCP. These contributions can be maximized through careful soil management to provide healthy soils, but poorly managed, degraded or polluted soils may contribute negatively to the delivery of NCP. Soils are also shown to contribute positively to the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Papers in the theme issue emphasize the need for careful soil management. Priorities for soil management must include: (i) for healthy soils in natural ecosystems, protect them from conversion and degradation, (ii) for managed soils, manage in a way to protect and enhance soil biodiversity, health, productivity and sustainability and to prevent degradation, and (iii) for degraded soils, restore to full soil health. Our knowledge of what constitutes sustainable soil management is mature enough to implement best management practices, in order to maintain and improve soil health. The papers in this issue show the vast potential of soils to contribute to NCP. This is not only desirable, but essential to sustain a healthy planet and if we are to deliver sustainable development in the decades to come. This article is part of the theme issue 'The role of soils in delivering Nature's Contributions to People'.
Sign in to start a discussion.
More Papers Like This
Soil health and ecosystem services
This review synthesized evidence on how soil health underpins critical ecosystem services including climate regulation, water purification, biodiversity support, and food production. The paper identifies pollution, including microplastic contamination, as one of the growing threats to soil health, alongside acidification, salinization, and biodiversity loss.
Spatial Risks ofMicroplastics in Soils and the CascadingEffects Thereof
This review mapped the spatial risks of microplastic contamination in global soils, examining how climate, land use, and human activities distribute MP pollution and analyzing cascading effects on soil ecology, carbon cycling, and ecosystem services.
Editorial for Special Issue on “Soil Solutions for a Sustainable World”
This editorial introduces a special issue on soil solutions for sustainable development, framing the critical role of soils in providing ecosystem services — including food production, water purification, and biodiversity support — while highlighting mounting anthropogenic threats such as erosion, contamination, and compaction.
Soil under stress: The importance of soil life and how it is influenced by (micro)plastic pollution
This review examines how plastic pollution in soil disrupts soil organisms and microorganisms that regulate essential ecosystem functions, finding that plastic alters soil chemistry, physical structure, and microbial communities in ways that threaten primary production and carbon cycling.
Are microplastics destabilizing the global network of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem services?
This review assessed how microplastics and nanoplastics disrupt terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem services — including soil fertility, water filtration, and food production — arguing that the cumulative impacts across global ecosystems may destabilize the network of services on which human society depends.