Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Lavelle P. (2000). Ecological challenges for soil science. Soil Science, 165 (1), p. 73-86. ISSN 0038-075X.

Titre du document
Ecological challenges for soil science
Année de publication
2000
Type de document
Article
Auteurs
Lavelle P.
Source
Soil Science, 2000, 165 (1), p. 73-86 ISSN 0038-075X
Soil science integrates specific contributions from physics, chemistry, biology, and the human sciences. During the last 2 decades, these approaches, which had primarily developed separately and at different speeds, have been progressively integrated. Ecology has contributed a significant number of integrative concepts and questions, some, such as nutrient cycling and energy budgets, that are rather old, and others, such as soil engineering by microinvertebrates, the relationship between biodiversity and soil function, and the impact of landscape fractionation, that are more recent. An important issue common to all disciplines in soil science is that of scales. Ecological studies have shown that similar activities, e.g., the building of solid structures by invertebrates for their sheltering or gut transit of soil for digestion, may affect soil function at different scales, affecting the rates of processes in sometimes opposite directions. The concept of functional domains in soil, derived from soil ecological research, defines a scale at which physical, chemical, and biological processes can be studied efficiently in a true multidisciplinary approach. Functional domains are specific sites in soils defined by a main organic resource (leaf litter or soil organic matter), a major regulator, biotic (i.e., an invertebrate "engineer" or roots) or abiotic (like freezing/ thawing or drying/rewetting alternates), a set of structures created by the regulator (for example fecal pellets, galleries, or cracks), and a community of dependent invertebrates of smaller size microorganisms that live in these structures. Functional domains may be physically identified in soils and specifically studied using the different disciplinary approaches. Specific micromorphologic, isotopic, and other techniques allow us to address issues at this scale adequately... (D'après résumé d'auteur)
Plan de classement
Pédologie : généralités [068PEDGEN] ; Ecosystèmes [082ECOSYS]
Descripteurs
PEDOLOGIE ; SOL ; ECOLOGIE ; EPISTEMOLOGIE ; RECHERCHE PLURIDISCIPLINAIRE ; INVERTEBRE ; MICROORGANISME ; UTILISATION DU SOL ; PRATIQUE CULTURALE ; GESTION DE L'ENVIRONNEMENT ; DEVELOPPEMENT DURABLE ; MODELISATION
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010021664]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010021664
Contact