Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Benchmarking soil organic carbon (SOC) concentration provides more robust soil health assessment than the SOC/clay ratio at European scale

Christopher J. Feeney, Laura Bentley, Daniele De Rosa, Panos Panagos, Bridget A. Emmett, Amy Thomas, D. Ashley Robinson

The Science of The Total Environment · 2024

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Summary

. New index classes for comparison with SOC/clay grades were established from the quartiles of each PCZ's O/T SOC distribution; these were termed: "Low" (below the 25th percentile), "Intermediate" (between the 25th and 50th percentiles), "High" (between the 50th and 75th percentiles), and "Very high" (above the 75th percentile). Compared with SOC/clay, O/T SOC was less sensitive to clay content, land cover, and climate, less geographically skewed, and better reflected differences in soil porosity and SOC stock, supporting 2 EU Soil Health Mission objectives (consolidating SOC stocks; improving soil structure for crops and biota). These patterns held for 2 independent datasets, and O/T SOC grades were sensitive enough to reflect land management differences across several long-term field exp

Subject
Soil carbon & organic matter
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
System type
Other
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2024.175642
Catalogue ID
SNmov5jpbp-2fqovf
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