Plowing: Dust storms, Conservation Agriculture, and need for a “Soil Health Act”

IF 2.2 4区 农林科学 Q2 ECOLOGY Journal of Soil and Water Conservation Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.2489/jswc.2023.0619A
Don Reicosky, David Brandt, Randall Reeder, Rattan Lal, David R. Montgomery
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The current farm bill already contains a Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and Growing Climate Solutions Act that can all be complemented and more effective with a healthy soil. The forthcoming farm bill should have provision to reward farmers for ecosystem services at a nominal rate, e.g., US$50 ac–1 yr–1 (~US$123.46 ha–1 y–1), through a proposed “Soil Health Act” to further CA as a solution to climate change and other environmental issues. Restoring soil health through CA is a win-win option and a major contribution to mitigating future climate extremes and food security. Ninety years after the Dust Bowl we should not need reminding that agriculture’s job is to feed people without degrading the environment, not create chaotic catastrophic events due to poor utilization and resource management. Unfortunately, the recent I-55 dust storm catastrophe in central Illinois, United States, in May of 2023 did just that and caused the loss of 8 lives, hospitalization of 37 others, loss or damage to 72 vehicles, and triggered associated environmental degradation (figure 1). This disaster was caused by low April rainfall—roughly half of normal amounts—and high winds that blew across freshly tilled fields and lofted Don Reicosky is a retired soil scientist for USDA Agricultural Research Service, North Central Soil Conservation Research Laboratory, Morris, Minnesota, and adjunct professor in the Soil Science Department, University of Minnesota. Randall Reeder is a retired agricultural engineer for Ohio State University, serves as executive director of the Ohio No-till Council, and coordinates programs for the Conservation Tillage and Technology Conference in Ada, Ohio. Rattan Lal is a distinguished professor of soil science at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. David R. Montgomery is a professor of earth and space sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. David Brandt, known as the “Godfather of Soil Health,” was a conservation farmer from Carroll, Ohio, who was recognized internationally as a leader in no-till, cover crops, soil health, and regenerative agriculture. Received June 19, 2023. loosened topsoil into the air. The tragedy captures one of the more visible unintended consequences of frequent intensive tillage when farmers plow in the fall, and till again one or two times before spring planting. Less visible consequences include soil erosion by runoff, as well as decreased soil, water, and air quality—and the loss of the soil organic matter that is at the heart of soil health. Soil dust from both tilled and bare fallow farmlands pose severe risks to public health and transportation safety, and this recent catastrophe illustrates the unintended consequences of soil mismanagement and the need for both farmer education and farm policy reform. Dust storms are a major catastrophe; they degrade the local soil and surrounding environmental quality and the health and well-being of humans and ecosystems. The increased frequency and intensity of dust storms associated with climate extremes and the associated deaths has become alarming. Tong et al. (2023) report that in most years windblown dust causes loss of life comparable to hurricanes, thunderstorms, and wildfires, with a total of 232 deaths from windblown dust events in the United States from 2007 to 2017. On November 29, 1991, the largest single dust-related highway incident in US history occurred on Interstate 5 in the San Joaquin Valley, California, where 164 vehicles collided, resulting in 17 deaths and injuring 151 additional people (Tong et al. 2023; Pauley et al. 1996). In most cases, similar crash sites are “situated near farmland, which constitutes a major dust source across the United States” (Tong et al. 2023; Lambert et al. 2020). Enhanced soil management will be required with widespread adoption of CA practices that preserve, protect, and restore our soil. Enhanced management of our agricultural soils will contribute to the welfare of humanity along with environmental quality and food security.","PeriodicalId":50049,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Soil and Water Conservation","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":2.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Soil and Water Conservation","FirstCategoryId":"97","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2489/jswc.2023.0619A","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"农林科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ECOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

T he dust storm tragedy on I-55 in central Illinois on May 1, 2023, a reminder of the Dust Bowl era of the 1930s, necessitates urgent policy intervention to replace plow tillage with Conservation Agriculture (CA) involving no-tillage with crop biomass mulch, cover cropping, and complex crop rotations. System-based CA has co-benefits including control of soil erosion by wind (dust storm) and water, low risks of nonpoint source pollution including algal bloom, adaptation and mitigation of climate change, reduced incidence of drought-flood syndrome, sustained productivity, high farm income, and improved soil health. The current farm bill already contains a Clean Water Act, Clean Air Act, and Growing Climate Solutions Act that can all be complemented and more effective with a healthy soil. The forthcoming farm bill should have provision to reward farmers for ecosystem services at a nominal rate, e.g., US$50 ac–1 yr–1 (~US$123.46 ha–1 y–1), through a proposed “Soil Health Act” to further CA as a solution to climate change and other environmental issues. Restoring soil health through CA is a win-win option and a major contribution to mitigating future climate extremes and food security. Ninety years after the Dust Bowl we should not need reminding that agriculture’s job is to feed people without degrading the environment, not create chaotic catastrophic events due to poor utilization and resource management. Unfortunately, the recent I-55 dust storm catastrophe in central Illinois, United States, in May of 2023 did just that and caused the loss of 8 lives, hospitalization of 37 others, loss or damage to 72 vehicles, and triggered associated environmental degradation (figure 1). This disaster was caused by low April rainfall—roughly half of normal amounts—and high winds that blew across freshly tilled fields and lofted Don Reicosky is a retired soil scientist for USDA Agricultural Research Service, North Central Soil Conservation Research Laboratory, Morris, Minnesota, and adjunct professor in the Soil Science Department, University of Minnesota. Randall Reeder is a retired agricultural engineer for Ohio State University, serves as executive director of the Ohio No-till Council, and coordinates programs for the Conservation Tillage and Technology Conference in Ada, Ohio. Rattan Lal is a distinguished professor of soil science at Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio. David R. Montgomery is a professor of earth and space sciences at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. David Brandt, known as the “Godfather of Soil Health,” was a conservation farmer from Carroll, Ohio, who was recognized internationally as a leader in no-till, cover crops, soil health, and regenerative agriculture. Received June 19, 2023. loosened topsoil into the air. The tragedy captures one of the more visible unintended consequences of frequent intensive tillage when farmers plow in the fall, and till again one or two times before spring planting. Less visible consequences include soil erosion by runoff, as well as decreased soil, water, and air quality—and the loss of the soil organic matter that is at the heart of soil health. Soil dust from both tilled and bare fallow farmlands pose severe risks to public health and transportation safety, and this recent catastrophe illustrates the unintended consequences of soil mismanagement and the need for both farmer education and farm policy reform. Dust storms are a major catastrophe; they degrade the local soil and surrounding environmental quality and the health and well-being of humans and ecosystems. The increased frequency and intensity of dust storms associated with climate extremes and the associated deaths has become alarming. Tong et al. (2023) report that in most years windblown dust causes loss of life comparable to hurricanes, thunderstorms, and wildfires, with a total of 232 deaths from windblown dust events in the United States from 2007 to 2017. On November 29, 1991, the largest single dust-related highway incident in US history occurred on Interstate 5 in the San Joaquin Valley, California, where 164 vehicles collided, resulting in 17 deaths and injuring 151 additional people (Tong et al. 2023; Pauley et al. 1996). In most cases, similar crash sites are “situated near farmland, which constitutes a major dust source across the United States” (Tong et al. 2023; Lambert et al. 2020). Enhanced soil management will be required with widespread adoption of CA practices that preserve, protect, and restore our soil. Enhanced management of our agricultural soils will contribute to the welfare of humanity along with environmental quality and food security.
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耕作:沙尘暴、保护性农业和“土壤健康法”的必要性
2023年5月1日发生在伊利诺伊州中部I-55号州际公路上的沙尘暴悲剧,让人想起了20世纪30年代的沙尘暴时代,迫切需要采取政策干预措施,用保护性农业(CA)取代犁耕,包括免耕、生物质能覆盖、覆盖种植和复杂的作物轮作。以系统为基础的农业生产具有多种协同效益,包括控制风(沙尘暴)和水对土壤的侵蚀、降低包括藻华在内的非点源污染风险、适应和减缓气候变化、减少旱涝综合征的发生率、维持生产力、提高农业收入和改善土壤健康。目前的农业法案已经包含了《清洁水法》、《清洁空气法》和《气候变化解决方案法》,这些法案都可以与健康的土壤相辅相成,更加有效。即将出台的农业法案应规定,通过拟议的“土壤卫生法”,以名义费率奖励农民提供生态系统服务,例如50美元/年(约123.46美元/年),以进一步将农业作为气候变化和其他环境问题的解决方案。通过CA恢复土壤健康是一个双赢的选择,也是对缓解未来极端气候和粮食安全的重大贡献。沙尘暴已经过去90年了,无需提醒我们,农业的工作是在不破坏环境的情况下养活人们,而不是由于利用和资源管理不善而造成混乱的灾难性事件。不幸的是,最近I-55沙尘暴灾难在伊利诺斯州中部,美国,2023年5月正是这样做的,造成的损失8生活,住院治疗的37人,损失或损坏72辆,并引发相关环境退化(图1)。这场灾难是由于低4月rainfall-roughly一半的正常数量和大风吹过新鲜耕种田地和漂浮不Reicosky是一名退休的土壤科学家为美国农业部农业研究服务,明尼苏达州莫里斯中北部土壤保持研究实验室,明尼苏达大学土壤科学系兼职教授。兰德尔·里德(Randall Reeder)是俄亥俄州立大学的退休农业工程师,担任俄亥俄州免耕委员会的执行董事,并协调在俄亥俄州阿达市举行的保护性耕作和技术会议的项目。Rattan Lal是俄亥俄州哥伦布市俄亥俄州立大学的杰出土壤科学教授。大卫·r·蒙哥马利(David R. Montgomery)是华盛顿州西雅图市华盛顿大学地球与空间科学教授。被称为“土壤健康教父”的大卫·勃兰特是一位来自俄亥俄州卡罗尔的保护性农民,他是国际上公认的免耕、覆盖作物、土壤健康和再生农业的领导者。收于2023年6月19日。表层土壤疏松到空气中。这场悲剧反映了频繁的密集耕作的一个更明显的意想不到的后果,农民在秋天犁地,在春天播种前再犁一两次。不太明显的后果包括径流造成的土壤侵蚀,以及土壤、水和空气质量的下降,以及作为土壤健康核心的土壤有机质的流失。耕作和光秃秃的休耕农田产生的土壤粉尘对公共健康和交通安全构成严重威胁,最近的这场灾难说明了土壤管理不善的意外后果,以及对农民进行教育和农业政策改革的必要性。沙尘暴是一场大灾难;它们使当地土壤和周围环境质量以及人类和生态系统的健康和福祉退化。与极端气候有关的沙尘暴频率和强度的增加以及与之相关的死亡人数令人震惊。Tong等人(2023)报告说,在大多数年份,风尘造成的生命损失与飓风、雷暴和野火相当,2007年至2017年,美国共有232人死于风尘事件。1991年11月29日,美国历史上最大的一次与沙尘有关的公路事故发生在加利福尼亚州圣华金河谷的5号州际公路上,164辆汽车相撞,造成17人死亡,151人受伤(Tong et al. 2023;Pauley et al. 1996)。在大多数情况下,类似的坠机地点“位于农田附近,这构成了美国的主要粉尘来源”(Tong et al. 2023;Lambert et al. 2020)。需要加强土壤管理,广泛采用养护、保护和恢复土壤的CA做法。加强对农业土壤的管理将有助于人类福祉、环境质量和粮食安全。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
2.60%
发文量
0
审稿时长
3.3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Soil and Water Conservation (JSWC) is a multidisciplinary journal of natural resource conservation research, practice, policy, and perspectives. The journal has two sections: the A Section containing various departments and features, and the Research Section containing peer-reviewed research papers.
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