Disappearing dirt rivals global warming as an environmental threat
By TOM PAULSON
The planet is getting skinned.
While many worry about the potential consequences of atmospheric
warming, a few experts are trying to call attention to another global
crisis quietly taking place under our feet.
- Sustainable farming not an easy sell
Call it the thin brown line. Dirt. On average, the planet is covered
with little more than 3 feet of topsoil -- the shallow skin of
nutrient-rich matter that sustains most of our food and appears to play
a critical role in supporting life on Earth.
"We're losing more and more of it every day," said David Montgomery, a
geologist at the University of Washington. "The estimate is that we are
now losing about 1 percent of our topsoil every year to erosion, most
of this caused by agriculture."
"It's just crazy," fumed John Aeschliman, a fifth-generation farmer who
grows wheat and other grains on the Palouse near the tiny town of
Almota, just west of Pullman.
"We're tearing up the soil and watching tons of it wash away every
year," Aeschliman said. He's one of a growing number of farmers trying
to persuade others to adopt "no-till" methods, which involve not
tilling the land between plantings, leaving crop stubble to reduce
erosion and planting new seeds between the stubble rows.
Montgomery has written a popular book, "Dirt," to call public attention
to what he believes is a neglected environmental catastrophe. A
geomorphologist who studies how landscapes form, Montgomery describes
modern agricultural practices as "soil mining" to emphasize that we are
rapidly outstripping the Earth's natural rate of restoring topsoil.
"Globally, it's clear we are eroding soils at a rate much faster than
they can form," said John Reganold, a soils scientist at Washington
State University. "It's hard to get people to pay much attention to
this because, frankly, most of us take soil for granted."
The National Academy of Sciences has determined that cropland in the
U.S. is being eroded at least 10 times faster than the time it takes
for lost soil to be replaced.
The United Nations has warned of worldwide soil degradation --
especially in sub-Saharan Africa, where soil loss has contributed to
the rapidly increasing number of malnourished people.
Healthy topsoil is a biological matrix, a housing complex for an
incredibly diverse community of organisms -- billions of beneficial
microbes per handful, nitrogen-fixing fungi, nutrients and earthworms
whose digestive tracts transform the fine grains of sterile rock and
plant detritus into the fertile excrement that gave rise to the word
itself ("drit," in Old Norse).
As such, true living topsoil cannot be made overnight, Montgomery
emphasized. Topsoil grows back at a rate of an inch or two over
hundreds of years. Very slowly.
"Globally, it's pretty clear we're running out of dirt," Montgomery
said.
Ron Myhrum, state soil scientist with the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's office in Spokane, agreed that global soil loss is a huge
problem. But Myhrum said erosion rates in the Northwest region have
improved recently because of better conservation farming practices,
including federal payments to farmers to leave some natural ground
cover in highly erodible areas.
"We don't have the kind of dust storms here we used to have," Myhrum
said. "What's more alarming to me than erosion is conversion of
farmland to urban use."
That is indeed another way to lose soil -- paving it over. Judy
Herring, manager of King County's farmland preservation program, said
the county has lost 60 percent of its farmland since the 1960s. In
1979, Herring said, voters approved a bond program that buys back
farmland to protect it from development (and has done this for 13,200
acres so far).
But while some land is lost to development, pollution or changing
weather patterns, Montgomery, Reganold and others say global soil loss
is a crisis mostly rooted in agriculture.
"Erosion rates have improved here, but that doesn't mean they're good,"
Reganold said. Topsoil clearly is still being stripped off faster than
it can be regenerated, he said.
Aeschliman, the Palouse farmer, a stocky and energetic man who doesn't
seem to notice that he's in his 60s, stood on a dirt road looking at
the difference between his land and that of a neighbor. Because most
neighbors are relatives, he did not provide any names here.
"Just look at that!" he bellowed, pointing to a series of water-carved
cracks and gouges running down a recently tilled field of wheat. Every
year, he said, these fields are tilled and the rains come, washing the
soil down into the road so deep the county routinely has to dig it out.
The rest of the soil runs off to the Snake River and, eventually, to
the Pacific.
"Here, look at this stuff," Aeschliman said as he held up a handful of
the fine brown silt that had eroded off his neighbor's (cousin's)
hillside. "Now, look over here."
He walked across the road to his no-till wheat field. Unlike the
rolling hills of loose dirt on the tilled field, Aeschliman's field
looks more like a shag rug, with its rows of dead wheat stubble. He
reached down into the dirt and pulled out a coarsely textured, much
darker clump of dirt, roots and debris.
"This soil is full of worms, bacteria and all sorts of life,"
Aeschliman said. "And it stays put. That stuff over there (waving his
thick hand back behind him) is just powder, brown dust. It's dead.
There's no worms, no life in it."
Thirty years ago, Aeschliman was one of the first in the Palouse to
grow his grains using no-till farming methods. He's an ardent no-till
proselytizer today, but he didn't abandon tilling the fields based on
some organic epiphany or desire to save the world.
"I just got tired of all the mud," Aeschliman said. The family home,
built in the 1880s, sits at the base of a long drainage off the rolling
wheat fields. Every spring, with the tilling and the rain, his home
would be a foot deep in muddy runoff.
No-till farming could do a lot to reduce topsoil erosion, Reganold
said, but it's not without its downsides. Switching to no-till farming
requires heavy upfront investment and learning new techniques, he said,
and also tends to depend more on herbicides because the weeds are no
longer controllable by plowing them into the soil.
Organic farming methods also can reduce soil loss, Reganold said. He
cited his own research, which has shown a marked increase in soil
health, water retention and regrowth when organic methods are used
rather than the traditional methods.
A regional association of farmers and other proponents of no-till
agriculture, also known as direct-seed farming, is holding its annual
meeting in Kennewick next week. Aeschliman is one of the founders of
the organization, the Pacific Northwest Direct Seed Association, and is
happy to see that no-till farming is growing in popularity.
"It's both good for the soil and good for your pocketbook," he said
Original
Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
The lowdown on topsoil: It's disappearing
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)