4.7 Article

Arable lands under the pressure of multiple land degradation processes. A global perspective

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 194, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2020.110697

Keywords

Arable lands; Land degradation processes; Incidence; Spatial analysis; Global impact

Funding

  1. Romanian Young Academy - Stiftung Mercator
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  3. UEFISCDI program, Romania [PN-III-P1-1.2-PCCDI-2017-0404/31PCCDI/2018]
  4. EcoSSSoil Project, Korea Environmental Industry & Technology Institute (KEITI), South Korea [2019002820004]

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This study examines the impact of land degradation on global arable lands, finding that aridity is the primary pressure affecting 40% of arable lands worldwide. Soil erosion is also significant, affecting around 20% of global arable systems.
While agricultural systems are a major pillar in global food security, their productivity is currently threatened by many environmental issues triggered by anthropogenic climate change and human activities, such as land degradation. However, the planetary spatial footprint of land degradation processes on arable lands, which can be considered a major component of global agricultural systems, is still insufficiently well understood. This study analyzes the land degradation footprint on global arable lands, using complex geospatial data on certain major degradation processes, i.e. aridity, soil erosion, vegetation decline, soil salinization and soil organic carbon decline. By applying geostatistical techniques that are representative for identifying the incidence of the five land degradation processes in global arable lands, results showed that aridity is by far the largest singular pressure for these agricultural systems, affecting similar to 40% of the arable lands' area, which cover approximately 14 million km(2) globally. It was found that soil erosion is another major degradation process, the unilateral impact of which affects similar to 20% of global arable systems. The results also showed that the two degradation processes simultaneously affect an additional similar to 7% of global arable lands, which makes this synergy the most common form of multiple pressure of land degradative conditions across the world's arable areas. The absolute statistical data showed that India, the United States, China, Brazil, Argentina, Russia and Australia are the most vulnerable countries in the world to the various pathways of arable land degradation. Also, in terms of percentages, statistical observations showed that African countries are the most heavily affected by arable system degradation. This study's findings can be useful for prioritizing agricultural management actions that can mitigate the negative effects of the two degradation processes or of others that currently affect many arable systems across the planet.

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