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Abstract
Soil is the most important natural resource for life on Earth after water. Given its fundamental role in sustaining the human population, both the availability and quality of soil must be managed sustainably and protected. To ensure sustainable management we need to understand the intrinsic functional capacity of different soils across Europe and how it changes over time. Soil monitoring is needed to support evidence-based policies to incentivise sustainable soil management. To this aim, we assessed which soil attributes can be used as potential indicators of five soil functions; (1) primary production, (2) water purification and regulation, (3) carbon sequestration and climate regulation, (4) soil biodiversity and habitat provisioning and (5) recycling of nutrients. We compared this list of attributes to existing national (regional) and EU-wide soil monitoring networks. The overall picture highlighted a clearly unbalanced dataset, in which predominantly chemical soil parameters were included, and soil biological and physical attributes were severely under represented. Methods applied across countries for indicators also varied. At a European scale, the LUCAS-soil survey was evaluated and again confirmed a lack of important soil biological parameters, such as C mineralisation rate, microbial biomass and earthworm community, and soil physical measures such as bulk density. In summary, no current national or European monitoring system exists which has the capacity to quantify the five soil functions and therefore evaluate multi-functional capacity of a soil and in many countries no data exists at all. This paper calls for the addition of soil biological and some physical parameters within the LUCAS-soil survey at European scale and for further development of national soil monitoring schemes.
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Details

1 Biometris, Wageningen University and Research (WUR), PO Box 16, 6700 AA, Wageningen, The Netherlands
2 INRA Infosol, US 1106, Orléans, France
3 European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Sustainable Resources Directorate, Land Resources Unit, Via E. Fermi 2749, 21027 Ispra, Italy
4 EU Delegation to Eritrea, European Commission DG International Cooperation and Development, Rue de la Loi 41, B-1049 Brussels, Belgium
5 Institute of Environmental Sciences, SzentIstvan University, PáterKároly u. 1., H-2100 Gödöllö, Hungary
6 National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, Antonie van Leeuwenhoeklaan 9, 3721 MA, Bilthoven, The Netherlands
7 Farming Systems Ecology, Wageningen University and Research (WUR), PO Box 430, 6700 AK, Wageningen, The Netherlands
8 Department for Soil Health and Plant Nutrition, Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety-AGES, Spargelfeldstraße 19, A-1220 Wien, Austria
9 GeorgikonFaculty, University of Pannonia, DeákFerenc u. 16, H-8361 Keszthely, Hungary
10 Soil Biology and Biological Soil Quality, Wageningen University and Research (WUR), PO Box 16, 6700 AA, Wageningen, The Netherlands; Author to whom any correspondence should be addressed.