The Soil-Human Health-Nexus
The term "soil health" refers to the functionality of a soil as a living ecosystem capable of sustaining plants, animals, and humans while also improving the environment. In addition to soil health, the environment also comprises the quality of air, water, vegetation, and biota. The health of soil, plants, animals, people, and the environment is an indivisible continuum.

One of the notable ramifications of the Anthropocene is the growing risks of decline in soil health by anthropogenic activities. Important among these activities are deforestation, biomass burning, excessive soil tillage, indiscriminate use of agrochemicals, excessive irrigation by flooding or inundation, and extractive farming practices. Soil pollution, by industrial effluents and urban waste adversely impacts human health. Degradation of soil health impacts nutritional quality of food, such as the uptake of heavy metals or deficit of essential micro-nutrients, and contamination by pests and pathogens. Indirectly, soil health may impact human health through contamination of water and pollution of air.

This book aims to:

Present relationships of soil health to human health and soil health to human nutrition.

Discuss the nexus between soil degradation and malnourishment as well as the important links between soil, plant, animal and human health.

Detail reasons oil is a cause of infectious diseases and source of remedial measures.

Part of the Advances in Soil Sciences series, this informative volume covering various aspects of soil health appeals to soil scientists, environmental scientists and public health workers.

1137456711
The Soil-Human Health-Nexus
The term "soil health" refers to the functionality of a soil as a living ecosystem capable of sustaining plants, animals, and humans while also improving the environment. In addition to soil health, the environment also comprises the quality of air, water, vegetation, and biota. The health of soil, plants, animals, people, and the environment is an indivisible continuum.

One of the notable ramifications of the Anthropocene is the growing risks of decline in soil health by anthropogenic activities. Important among these activities are deforestation, biomass burning, excessive soil tillage, indiscriminate use of agrochemicals, excessive irrigation by flooding or inundation, and extractive farming practices. Soil pollution, by industrial effluents and urban waste adversely impacts human health. Degradation of soil health impacts nutritional quality of food, such as the uptake of heavy metals or deficit of essential micro-nutrients, and contamination by pests and pathogens. Indirectly, soil health may impact human health through contamination of water and pollution of air.

This book aims to:

Present relationships of soil health to human health and soil health to human nutrition.

Discuss the nexus between soil degradation and malnourishment as well as the important links between soil, plant, animal and human health.

Detail reasons oil is a cause of infectious diseases and source of remedial measures.

Part of the Advances in Soil Sciences series, this informative volume covering various aspects of soil health appeals to soil scientists, environmental scientists and public health workers.

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The Soil-Human Health-Nexus

The Soil-Human Health-Nexus

The Soil-Human Health-Nexus
The Soil-Human Health-Nexus

The Soil-Human Health-Nexus

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Overview

The term "soil health" refers to the functionality of a soil as a living ecosystem capable of sustaining plants, animals, and humans while also improving the environment. In addition to soil health, the environment also comprises the quality of air, water, vegetation, and biota. The health of soil, plants, animals, people, and the environment is an indivisible continuum.

One of the notable ramifications of the Anthropocene is the growing risks of decline in soil health by anthropogenic activities. Important among these activities are deforestation, biomass burning, excessive soil tillage, indiscriminate use of agrochemicals, excessive irrigation by flooding or inundation, and extractive farming practices. Soil pollution, by industrial effluents and urban waste adversely impacts human health. Degradation of soil health impacts nutritional quality of food, such as the uptake of heavy metals or deficit of essential micro-nutrients, and contamination by pests and pathogens. Indirectly, soil health may impact human health through contamination of water and pollution of air.

This book aims to:

Present relationships of soil health to human health and soil health to human nutrition.

Discuss the nexus between soil degradation and malnourishment as well as the important links between soil, plant, animal and human health.

Detail reasons oil is a cause of infectious diseases and source of remedial measures.

Part of the Advances in Soil Sciences series, this informative volume covering various aspects of soil health appeals to soil scientists, environmental scientists and public health workers.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780367422134
Publisher: CRC Press
Publication date: 01/04/2021
Series: Advances in Soil Science
Pages: 350
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Rattan Lal, Ph.D., is a Distinguished University Professor of Soil Science and Director of the Carbon Management and Sequestration Center, The Ohio State University, and an Adjunct Professor of University of Iceland. His current research focus is on climate-resilient agriculture, soil carbon sequestration, sustainable intensification, enhancing use efficiency of agroecosystems, and sustainable management of soil resources of the tropics. He has received honorary degrees of Doctor of Science from Punjab Agricultural University (2001), the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Aas (2005), Alecu Russo Balti State University, Moldova (2010), Technical University of Dresden, Germany (2015), University of Lleida, Spain (2017), Gustavus Adolphus College, Saint Peter, Minnesota, and PUCV, Valparaiso, Chile (2019). He was president of the World Association of the Soil and Water Conservation (1987-1990), the International Soil Tillage Research Organization (1988-91), the Soil Science Society of America (2005-2007), and is President of International Union of Soil Science (2017-2018). He was a member of the Federal Advisory Committee on U.S. National Assessment of Climate Change-NCADAC (2010-2013), member of the SERDP Scientific Advisory Board of the US-DOE (2011-2018), Senior Science Advisor to the Global Soil Forum of Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies, Potsdam, Germany (2010-2015), member of the Advisory Board of Joint Program Initiative of Agriculture, Food Security and Climate Change (FACCE-JPI) of the European Union (2013-2016), and Chair of the Advisory Board of Institute for Integrated Management of Material Fluxes and Resources of the United Nation University (UNU-FLORES), Dresden, Germany (2014-2019). Prof. Lal was a lead author of IPCC (1998-2000). He has mentored 115 graduate students, 54 postdoctoral researchers, and hosted 174 visiting scholars. He has authored/co-authored 950 referred journal articles, has written 20 and edited / co-edited 75 books. For 6 years (2014-2019), Reuter Thomson listed him among the world’s most influential scientific minds and having citations of publications among top 1% of scientists in agricultural sciences. He is recipient of the 2018 GCHERA World Agriculture Prize, 2018 Glinka World Soil Prize, and 2019 Japan Prize.

Table of Contents

Preface vii

Editor ix

Contributors xi

Chapter 1 The Soil-Human Health-Environment Trinity Rattan Lal 1

Chapter 2 Health of Soil, Plants, Animals, and People Kathi J. Kemper Ye Xia Jeffrey Lakritz Rattan Lal 13

Chapter 3 Transport of Mineral Elements from Soil and Human Health Sheng Huang Jian Feng Ma 47

Chapter 4 Soils and Human Health: Communication between Soil Scientists and Health Care Providers David Collier Eric C. Brevik 59

Chapter 5 Soil and Cancer Marium Husain 81

Chapter 6 Addressing Urban Mai- and Undernourishment through Sustainable Home Gardens Neeraj H. Tayal 111

Chapter 7 Improving Human Health by Remediating Polluted Soils Darryl D. Siemer 129

Chapter 8 Managing Soil for Global Peace by Eliminating Famines and Pandemics Rattan Lal 143

Chapter 9 Illustrating a Disjoint in the Soil-Plant-Human Health Nexus with Potassium Kaushik Majumdar T. Scott Murell Sudarshan Dutta Robert L. Mikkelsen Ashwin Kotnis Shamie Zingore Gavin Sulewski Thomas Oberthur 159

Chapter 10 Soil Aquaphotomics for Understanding Soil-Health Relation through Water-Light Interaction Jelena Muncan Balkis Aouadi Flora Vitalis Zoltan Kovacs Roumiana Tsenkova 197

Chapter 11 Healthy Soils-Healthy People: Soil and Human Health-The Reality of the Balkan Region Ratko Ristic Marijana Kapovic Solomun Ivan Maluševic Slavko Zdrale Boris Radic Siniša Polovina Vukašin Milcanovic 223

Chapter 12 Heavy Metals Bioavailability in Soils and Impact on Human Health Bal Ram Singh Hamisi Tindwa Abul M. Kashem Dheeraj Panghaal Ernest Semu 249

Chapter 13 Managing Soil Biology for Multiple Human Benefits André L.C. Franco Steven J. Fonte Diana H. Wall 275

Chapter 14 Structural Attributes of Disease-Suppressive Soils and Their Impact on Human Health Rattan Lal 303

Chapter 15 Soil Health and Human Nutrition Rattan Lai 315

Index 327

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