How Do Human Activities Affect Soil?: What's New: Week 6 Earth Science
This document discusses how human activities affect soil quality. It identifies farming, construction, and waste disposal as major activities that can degrade soils. Farming can strip away protective plant cover, leading to erosion from wind and rain. It can also pollute soils with excess fertilizers. Construction activities remove protective cover and can cause erosion, while waste disposal without proper lining of landfills can release toxins into soils and groundwater. The document proposes solutions like conservation tillage, crop rotation, terracing, and water control structures to reduce erosion and pollution from these human activities. Educating farmers and land users on sustainable practices is important to protect soils for the future.
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How Do Human Activities Affect Soil?: What's New: Week 6 Earth Science
This document discusses how human activities affect soil quality. It identifies farming, construction, and waste disposal as major activities that can degrade soils. Farming can strip away protective plant cover, leading to erosion from wind and rain. It can also pollute soils with excess fertilizers. Construction activities remove protective cover and can cause erosion, while waste disposal without proper lining of landfills can release toxins into soils and groundwater. The document proposes solutions like conservation tillage, crop rotation, terracing, and water control structures to reduce erosion and pollution from these human activities. Educating farmers and land users on sustainable practices is important to protect soils for the future.
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What’s New: Week 6 Earth Science
How do human activities affect soil?
Submitted by: Janel P. Flores
Section: Stem 11 - T Submitted to: Ma’am Lou Itoc Cabugo I. Introduction Soil, the biologically active, porous medium that has developed in the uppermost layer of Earth’s crust. Soil is one of the principal substrata of life on Earth, serving as a reservoir of water and nutrients, as a medium for the filtration and breakdown of injurious wastes, and as a participant in the cycling of carbon and other elements through the global ecosystem. It has evolved through weathering processes driven by biological, climatic, geologic, and topographic influences. We have to conserve our natural resources since many of them are limited. Conserve means to protect something from harm or destruction. Many people are committed to taking care of earth's natural resources.
This Research paper contain about the causes and effects
of certain human activities to soil degradation and demonstrate the effectiveness on how to save or protect our soil resources. II. Background Information Natural resources are available to sustain the very complex interaction between living things and non-living things. Humans also benefit immensely from this interaction. All over the world, people consume resources directly or indirectly. Developed countries consume more resources than under-developed countries. Soil is a necessary resource. Soil helps sustain life on Earth including your life. You already know that soil supports the growth of plants, which in turn supply food for animals. Therefore, soil provides you with nearly all the food you eat. But that’s not all. Many other items you use, such as cotton clothing and medicines, come from plants. Lumber in your home comes from trees. Even the oxygen you breathe comes from plants. Besides supporting the growth of plants, soil plays other life sustaining roles. Soil helps purify, or clean, water as it drains through the ground and into rivers, lakes, and oceans. Decomposers in soil also help recycle nutrients by breaking down the remains of plants and animals, releasing nutrients that living plants use to grow. In addition, soil provides a home for a variety of living things, from tiny one-celled organisms to small mammals. The way people use land can affect the levels of nutrients and pollution in soil. Any activity that exposes soil to wind and rain can lead to soil loss. Farming, construction and development, and mining are among the main activities that impact soil resources. The resources that we have now are slowly diminishing as time goes by because of ignorance and unrighteous acts of other human beings. Farming, construction of structure and waste disposal affect the soil quality and availability since they have negative effects to the soil. Anything that could happen in the land by these activities can cause direct damage to soil organisms that can lead to soil degradation and sedimentation III. Evaluation of the case What happens when soil quality has been affected caused by different situations? Farming - is very important to society because almost all of the world’s food is grown on farms. Over the 10,000 years humans have been farming, people have continually improved their farming methods. However, farming has some harmful effects and can lead to soil loss. Farmers often add nutrients to soil in the form of organic or artificial fertilizers to make their crops grow better. However, some fertilizers can make it difficult for microorganisms in the soil to produce nutrients naturally. Fertilizers also add to water pollution when rainwater draining from fields carries the excess nutrients to rivers, lakes, and oceans. Over time, many farming practices lead to the loss of soil. All over the world, farmers clear trees and other plants and plow up the soil to plant crops. Without its natural plant cover, the soil is more exposed to rain and wind and is therefore more likely to get washed or blown away. American farmers lose about five metric tons of soil for each metric ton of grain they produce. In many other parts of the world, the losses are even higher. Another problem is overgrazing. Overgrazing occurs when farm animals eat large amounts of the land cover. Overgrazing destroys natural vegetation and causes the soil to wash or blow away more easily. In many dry regions of the world, overgrazing and the clearing of land for farming have led to desertification. the expansion of desert conditions in areas where the natural plant cover has been destroyed.
Construction of Structures - Construction activities,
such as grading and filling, drastically reduce soil quality on construction sites. Left unprotected, sites will be further degraded by erosion and begin to adversely affect the surrounding environment. The goal of soil quality management on construction sites is to revegetate for protection against off-site damage and increase soil organic matter levels to remedy the on-site damage caused by site preparation. To make roads, houses, shopping malls, and other buildings, people need to dig up the soil. Some of the soil at construction sites washes or blows away because its protective plant cover has been removed. The soil that is washed or blown away ends up in nearby low- lying areas, in rivers and streams, or in downstream lakes or reservoirs. This soil can cause problems by making rivers and lakes muddy and harming the organisms that live in them. The buildup of soil on riverbeds raises the level of the rivers and may cause flooding. The soil can also fill up lakes and reservoirs.
Waste disposal - the collection, processing, and
recycling or deposition of the waste materials of human society. Waste is classified by source and composition. From being an eyesore to releasing toxins, improper waste disposal on any scale can create environmental problems, health problems and even economic concerns. This is also true for older landfill sites, which are often unlined. The lining of landfills prevents toxic substances from being released into the ground water. Littering causes an eyesore, which devalues the land around it. This impacts tourism, businesses and residents alike. IV. Propose Solution When it comes to finding solutions for soil erosion, the most useful techniques found tend to be those that emphasize reinforcing the structure of the soil and reducing processes that affect it. 1. Careful Tilling Because tilling activity breaks up the structure of the soil, doing less tilling with fewer passes will preserve more of the crucial topsoil. 2. Crop Rotation Plenty of crop rotation is crucial for keeping land happy and healthy. This allows organic matter to build up, making future plantings more fertile. 3. Increased Structure for Plants Introducing terraces or other means of stabilizing plant life or even the soil around them can help reduce the chance that the soil loosens and erodes. Boosting areas that are prone to erosion with sturdy plant life can be a great way to stave off future effects. 4. Water Control For those areas where soil erosion is predominantly caused by water – whether natural or man-made – specialized chutes and runoff pipes can help to direct these water sources away from the susceptible areas, helping stave off excess erosion. Having these filters in particular areas rather than leading to natural bodies of water is a focus to reduce pollution. 5. Soil Conservation Soil conservation can be defined as “the combination of the appropriate land use and management practices that promotes the productive and sustainable use of soils and, in the process, minimizes soil erosion and other forms of land degradation.” Various measures for soil conservation are primarily meant for the prevention of soil loss or reduced fertility caused by acidification, over usage, salinization or other chemical soil contamination. Different techniques for improved soil conservation involve cover crops, crop rotation, planted windbreaks, and conservation tillage and affect both fertility and erosion. -A major factor for preventing soil erosion is educating more and more people who work with the land on why it is a concern, and what they can do to help reduce it. This means outreach to farmers in susceptible areas for ways that they can help protect crops from inclement weather or ways that they can help make sure their soil remains compact without restricting their plant growing activities. V.Recommendation For all I know if we follow the solutions we can save and protect our soil. The world should not be ignorant about our resources, where it came from, the importance or needs. Because if they neglected for what we have now they will regret it in the future, so we need to value and save them now because without them we cannot survive later on. https://www.worldwildlife.org/threats/soil-erosion-and- degradation https://www.wri.org/blog/2020/01/causes-effects-how-to- prevent-soil-erosion http://www.omafra.gov.on.ca/english/engineer/facts/12- 053.htm