Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryNGO report

UK, two thirds of soils show nutrient deficit

Isonio E

2023.0

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Summary

This article, published by the ReSoil Foundation, synthesises evidence on the state of soil nutrient health in the UK, reporting that around two thirds of soils are in a nutrient-deficient condition. Drawing on existing soil monitoring and survey data, it highlights the scale of soil fertility decline as a significant challenge for agricultural productivity and environmental sustainability. As a piece from an NGO-affiliated platform, it is likely intended to communicate research findings to a broader audience rather than present original primary data.

UK applicability

The article is directly focused on UK soil conditions, making its findings highly relevant to UK agricultural policy, farm management practice, and soil health initiatives such as those promoted under the Environmental Land Management scheme. It contextualises the urgency of addressing soil nutrient depletion within a UK-specific policy and land management framework.

Key measures

Proportion of soils showing nutrient deficit (%); soil nutrient status indicators (likely phosphorus, potassium, magnesium, pH)

Outcomes reported

The article reports that approximately two thirds of UK soils exhibit nutrient deficits, examining the extent and distribution of soil nutrient degradation across agricultural land. It likely discusses implications for soil fertility, food production, and long-term land sustainability.

Theme
Farming systems, soils & land use
Subject
Soil fertility & nutrient cycling
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
NGO report
Status
Published
Geography
UK
System type
Arable cereals
Catalogue ID
WP0020

Topic tags

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