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The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

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The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. / Keesstra, S. D.; Bouma, J.; Wallinga, J. et al.
In: SOIL, Vol. 2, No. 2, 07.04.2016, p. 111-128.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Keesstra, SD, Bouma, J, Wallinga, J, Tittonell, P, Smith, P, Cerdà, A, Montanarella, L, Quinton, JN, Pachepsky, Y, van der Putten, WH, Moolenaar, S, Mol, G, Jansen, B & Fresco, LO 2016, 'The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals', SOIL, vol. 2, no. 2, pp. 111-128. https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-2-111-2016

APA

Keesstra, S. D., Bouma, J., Wallinga, J., Tittonell, P., Smith, P., Cerdà, A., Montanarella, L., Quinton, J. N., Pachepsky, Y., van der Putten, W. H., Moolenaar, S., Mol, G., Jansen, B., & Fresco, L. O. (2016). The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. SOIL, 2(2), 111-128. https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-2-111-2016

Vancouver

Keesstra SD, Bouma J, Wallinga J, Tittonell P, Smith P, Cerdà A et al. The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. SOIL. 2016 Apr 7;2(2):111-128. doi: 10.5194/soil-2-111-2016

Author

Keesstra, S. D. ; Bouma, J. ; Wallinga, J. et al. / The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. In: SOIL. 2016 ; Vol. 2, No. 2. pp. 111-128.

Bibtex

@article{a900a9c227ed40e5a0a69e448e9b31d3,
title = "The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals",
abstract = " In this forum paper we discuss how soil scientists can help to reach the recently adopted UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the most effective manner. Soil science, as a land-related discipline, has important links to several of the SDGs, which are demonstrated through the functions of soils and the ecosystem services that are linked to those functions (see graphical abstract in the Supplement). We explore and discuss how soil scientists can rise to the challenge both internally, in terms of our procedures and practices, and externally, in terms of our relations with colleague scientists in other disciplines, diverse groups of stakeholders and the policy arena. To meet these goals we recommend the following steps to be taken by the soil science community as a whole: (i) embrace the UN SDGs, as they provide a platform that allows soil science to demonstrate its relevance for realizing a sustainable society by 2030; (ii) show the specific value of soil science: research should explicitly show how using modern soil information can improve the results of inter- and transdisciplinary studies on SDGs related to food security, water scarcity, climate change, biodiversity loss and health threats; (iii) take leadership in overarching system analysis of ecosystems, as soils and soil scientists have an integrated nature and this places soil scientists in a unique position; (iii) raise awareness of soil organic matter as a key attribute of soils to illustrate its importance for soil functions and ecosystem services; (iv) improve the transfer of knowledge through knowledge brokers with a soil background; (v) start at the basis: educational programmes are needed at all levels, starting in primary schools, and emphasizing practical, down-to-earth examples; (vi) facilitate communication with the policy arena by framing research in terms that resonate with politicians in terms of the policy cycle or by considering drivers, pressures and responses affecting impacts of land use change; and finally (vii) all this is only possible if researchers, with soil scientists in the front lines, look over the hedge towards other disciplines, to the world at large and to the policy arena, reaching over to listen first, as a basis for genuine collaboration.",
author = "Keesstra, {S. D.} and J. Bouma and J. Wallinga and P. Tittonell and P. Smith and A. Cerd{\`a} and L. Montanarella and Quinton, {J. N.} and Y. Pachepsky and van der Putten, {W. H.} and S. Moolenaar and G. Mol and B. Jansen and Fresco, {L. O.}",
year = "2016",
month = apr,
day = "7",
doi = "10.5194/soil-2-111-2016",
language = "English",
volume = "2",
pages = "111--128",
journal = "SOIL",
issn = "2199-398X",
publisher = "Copernicus GmbH",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The significance of soils and soil science towards realization of the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

AU - Keesstra, S. D.

AU - Bouma, J.

AU - Wallinga, J.

AU - Tittonell, P.

AU - Smith, P.

AU - Cerdà, A.

AU - Montanarella, L.

AU - Quinton, J. N.

AU - Pachepsky, Y.

AU - van der Putten, W. H.

AU - Moolenaar, S.

AU - Mol, G.

AU - Jansen, B.

AU - Fresco, L. O.

PY - 2016/4/7

Y1 - 2016/4/7

N2 - In this forum paper we discuss how soil scientists can help to reach the recently adopted UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the most effective manner. Soil science, as a land-related discipline, has important links to several of the SDGs, which are demonstrated through the functions of soils and the ecosystem services that are linked to those functions (see graphical abstract in the Supplement). We explore and discuss how soil scientists can rise to the challenge both internally, in terms of our procedures and practices, and externally, in terms of our relations with colleague scientists in other disciplines, diverse groups of stakeholders and the policy arena. To meet these goals we recommend the following steps to be taken by the soil science community as a whole: (i) embrace the UN SDGs, as they provide a platform that allows soil science to demonstrate its relevance for realizing a sustainable society by 2030; (ii) show the specific value of soil science: research should explicitly show how using modern soil information can improve the results of inter- and transdisciplinary studies on SDGs related to food security, water scarcity, climate change, biodiversity loss and health threats; (iii) take leadership in overarching system analysis of ecosystems, as soils and soil scientists have an integrated nature and this places soil scientists in a unique position; (iii) raise awareness of soil organic matter as a key attribute of soils to illustrate its importance for soil functions and ecosystem services; (iv) improve the transfer of knowledge through knowledge brokers with a soil background; (v) start at the basis: educational programmes are needed at all levels, starting in primary schools, and emphasizing practical, down-to-earth examples; (vi) facilitate communication with the policy arena by framing research in terms that resonate with politicians in terms of the policy cycle or by considering drivers, pressures and responses affecting impacts of land use change; and finally (vii) all this is only possible if researchers, with soil scientists in the front lines, look over the hedge towards other disciplines, to the world at large and to the policy arena, reaching over to listen first, as a basis for genuine collaboration.

AB - In this forum paper we discuss how soil scientists can help to reach the recently adopted UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in the most effective manner. Soil science, as a land-related discipline, has important links to several of the SDGs, which are demonstrated through the functions of soils and the ecosystem services that are linked to those functions (see graphical abstract in the Supplement). We explore and discuss how soil scientists can rise to the challenge both internally, in terms of our procedures and practices, and externally, in terms of our relations with colleague scientists in other disciplines, diverse groups of stakeholders and the policy arena. To meet these goals we recommend the following steps to be taken by the soil science community as a whole: (i) embrace the UN SDGs, as they provide a platform that allows soil science to demonstrate its relevance for realizing a sustainable society by 2030; (ii) show the specific value of soil science: research should explicitly show how using modern soil information can improve the results of inter- and transdisciplinary studies on SDGs related to food security, water scarcity, climate change, biodiversity loss and health threats; (iii) take leadership in overarching system analysis of ecosystems, as soils and soil scientists have an integrated nature and this places soil scientists in a unique position; (iii) raise awareness of soil organic matter as a key attribute of soils to illustrate its importance for soil functions and ecosystem services; (iv) improve the transfer of knowledge through knowledge brokers with a soil background; (v) start at the basis: educational programmes are needed at all levels, starting in primary schools, and emphasizing practical, down-to-earth examples; (vi) facilitate communication with the policy arena by framing research in terms that resonate with politicians in terms of the policy cycle or by considering drivers, pressures and responses affecting impacts of land use change; and finally (vii) all this is only possible if researchers, with soil scientists in the front lines, look over the hedge towards other disciplines, to the world at large and to the policy arena, reaching over to listen first, as a basis for genuine collaboration.

U2 - 10.5194/soil-2-111-2016

DO - 10.5194/soil-2-111-2016

M3 - Journal article

VL - 2

SP - 111

EP - 128

JO - SOIL

JF - SOIL

SN - 2199-398X

IS - 2

ER -