Human Induced Land Degradation is Preventable Through Understanding and Remediation of the
Underlying Causes
Land degradation is a human induced or
natural process which negatively affects the land to function effectively
within an ecosystem, by accepting, storing and recycling water, energy,
and nutrients.
Desertification is land degradation
occurring in the arid, semiarid and dry subhumid areas of the world. These
susceptible drylands cover 40 percent of the earth's surface and puts at
risk more than 1 billion people who are dependent on these lands for
survival.
Land degradation cancels out gains advanced by improved crop yields and
reduced population growth.
The causes of land degradation are mainly anthropogenic and mainly
agriculture related.
- The Major Causes:
- Land clearing and deforestation
- Agricultural mining of soil nutrients
- Urban conversion
- Irrigation
- Pollution
- The Major Stresses:
- accelerated erosion by wind and water
- removal of nutrients
- acidity increase
- salination
- alkalinization
- destruction of soil structure
- loss of organic matter
Severe land degradation affects a significant portion of the earth's
arable lands, decreasing the wealth and economic development of nations.
The link between a degraded environment and poverty is direct and
intimate.
As the land resource base becomes less productive, food security is
compromised and competition for dwindling resources increases, the seeds
of potential conflict are sown.
Species diversity is lessened and often lost as lands are cleared and
converted to agriculture.
Thus a downward eco-social spiral is created when marginal lands are
nutrient depleted by unsustainable land management practices resulting in
lost soil stability leading to permanent damage.
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