Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-dh8gc Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T07:55:37.990Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Guest editorial: managing our soils: learning from the past to help feed a growing world population

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2022

David Charles*
Affiliation:
Retired
John Randall
Affiliation:
Retired
Rosemary Dove
Affiliation:
Retired
Mick Thompson
Affiliation:
Retired
Teresa Needham
Affiliation:
University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
*
Author for correspondence: David Charles, E-mail: dandscharles@hotmail.co.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press

‘Soils: where food begins’ (Food and Agriculture Organisation, 2022)

The sustainability of global and UK food supply is linked to the sustainability of agricultural systems, and that depends on the sustainability of their soils. But soils are fragile, and in ecological studies at Rushcliffe Country Park, Nottingham, UK (GPS 5719231652) on 25 July 2022, we recorded a striking example of this fragility.

After a long period of hot dry weather cracks 1 to 2 cm wide and 20 cm deep had occurred in a control 5 m × 5 m plot, and in the surrounding field. But cracks did not occur in a plot which had since 2012 received 2 litres/m2 per year of a compost based on farmyard manure. Although the grasses and forbs of both plots were scorched above ground level, those of the compost plot were taller and thicker, providing protection at ground level. There were mosses on the soil surface which were still green.

It was postulated that differences in vulnerability to cracking between plots may have been at least partly due to differences in soil organic matter content. Therefore, two soil samples per plot were taken to 14 cm depth and the samples pooled. For a volumetric analysis pooled samples were shaken in water in a measuring cylinder and left to settle for 24 h, after which the organic material had floated to the top. Gravimetric analysis was by loss on ignition of air-dried pooled samples. Carbonate values were included as indicators of inorganic carbon and of the mineral status of the plot soils.

Results of soil analyses

The larger difference in organic matter content between treatment and control by the floatation method may have been due either to the fibrous nature of the compost organic matter, or to the cruder analytical method, or both. The nitrogen fixing plant melilot (Melilotus officinalis, botanical family Papilionaceae) was present on the composted plot but not on the control plot. Thus, there could have been a positive feedback effect on the plant nutrient status of the plot. Because the plots were not replicated the data in the table could not be analysed by conventional statistical inference (Fisher and Yates, Reference Fisher and Yates1938; Jeffreys, Reference Jeffreys1961; Charles, Reference Charles2020b), but they are part of a Bayesian description (Matthews, Reference Matthews1998) of a difference which was visually and ecologically stark and inescapable.

These observations link our work with other studies on soil care and agricultural sustainability, a brief history of which follows.

The history of agriculture, and that of the hunting and gathering which preceded it, provide comparisons of the sustainability of historic systems with that of modern techniques. The food acquisition systems of the pre-historic hunter gatherers (Tannahill, Reference Tannahill1988; Charles, Reference Charles2002) of the Middle Pleistocene (Larsen, Reference Larsen, Kiple and Ornelas2000) could not be classed as sustainable since the process was extractive.

The cultivation of einkorn wheat (Triticum monococcum) and the domestication of the sheep (Ovis aries) occurred about 9000 BC (Charles, Reference Charles2002). The goat and the pig (Capra hircus and Sus scrofa respectively) were domesticated about 7000 BC and cattle (Bos taurus) about 6000 BC. These developments led to settled life styles, but in Neolithic times if soil fertility began to fail populations cleared more forest and moved on, so that the system was not strictly sustainable. Over grazing and inadequate fallowing sometimes even led to a return to hunting (Miller and Wetterstrom, Reference Miller, Wetterstrom, Kiple and Ornelas2000).

About 700 BC the Greek poet Hesiod wrote that fallowing was a ‘…defence against disaster and a comfort to the children’. He also advocated diligent ploughing (Cartledge, Reference Cartledge1998).

By the 3rd century BC, it had been realized by Greek agricultural writers that beans invigorated the soil (Shorrocks, Reference Shorrocks2017). But despite this agronomic sustainability break through, care of the soil in classical times was sometimes so neglected that it has even been suggested that one of the reasons for the fall of the Roman Empire was the abuse of its soils (Montgomery, Reference Montgomery2017).

For more than a thousand years after the Romans left Britain the maintenance of soil fertility was achieved by leaving one field in three, or sometimes four, fallow in unfenced open field villages (Rundle, Reference Rundle1955; Charles, Reference Charles2002). But this extravagant use of land was no longer acceptable once the industrial revolution meant that larger urban populations had to be fed.

Enclosure of the open fields created individual farms and permitted closer control over crops and livestock. It was therefore a significant development in the care of soils. Lyth (Reference Lyth1989) and Atkins et al. (Reference Atkins, Hammond and Roper1999) described enclosure in Nottinghamshire, UK. Rundle (Reference Rundle1955) described the survival of the open field system at Laxton, Nottinghamshire, where 711 ha was purchased in 1951 by the UK Ministry of Agriculture to preserve the heritage.

Charles (Reference Charles2020a) reviewed the history and biology of the crop rotations developed from the 18th century onwards, including the famous Norfolk (UK) four course rotation (wheat – turnips – barley – clover) pioneered by Charles ‘Turnip’ Townshend (1674–1738) of Raynham and Thomas Coke (1754–1842) of Holkham. The inclusion of clover (Trifolium spp., family Papilionaceae) in these rotations would have contributed to their soil sustainability by virtue of nitrogen fixation. Livestock utilized the clovers. The value of livestock manures in these rotations was stressed by Wiseman (Reference Wiseman1986), who pointed out that sometimes the profitability of 19th century livestock enterprises was based on the value of their manure. The livestock improver Robert Bakewell of Loughborough, UK, (1725–1795) took the value of manures so seriously that he occasionally wintered the livestock of his neighbours with their dung as his only return (Stanley, Reference Stanley1995).

It is interesting that Viscount Charles ‘Turnip’ Townshend is remembered for his crop rotations, even though his day job was Foreign Secretary (Wade Martins, Reference Wade Martins1990). That illustrates the significance of the turnip (Brassica rapa) (Francis, Reference Francis2013) and of crop rotations, soil care and sustainable agriculture in British history.

The widespread use of chemical fertilisers contributed to the green revolution of the 1950s and 1960s and may have saved up to a billion lives according to Shorrocks (Reference Shorrocks2017). However, following the publication of Rachel Carson's Silent spring (Carson, Reference Carson1962), the organic movements, originally dating from the 1920s, grew in popularity and influence, and the Soil Association, founded in 1946, produced a set of guidelines in 1967. The International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements was founded in 1972. Textbooks on organic farming began to appear, such as Lampkin (Reference Lampkin1990), Younie and Wilkinson (Reference Younie and Wilkinson2001) and Gordon and Charles (Reference Gordon and Charles2002).

World War II and the immediate post war years were periods of emphasis on productivity of the land in Britain. The Agriculture Act of 1947 created a research and advisory support structure in UK (Charles, Reference Charles2002). Histories of these infra-structures by sector in Britain included that for poultry by Hewson (Reference Hewson1986) and for pigs by Wiseman (Reference Wiseman1986) and Wiseman (Reference Wiseman2000). A textbook on dairy farming stressed the value of manure on arable land (Russell, Reference Russell1952).

In the mid-20th century land utilization, including the hills and uplands, was regarded as important for UK food security and sustainability, and the analysis by Stapledon (Reference Stapledon1944) included the contributions of grazing animals. The continuing relevance of Stapledon's analysis to issues arising eight decades later is impressive.

Dangers to the sustainability of soils were pointed out and quantified by authors such as Montgomery (loc. cit.) and Parkinson (Reference Parkinson and Soffe2003). Conservation agriculture aims to protect the soil while at the same time maintaining yields (Oliver, Reference Oliver, Oliver, Bishop and Marchant2018). Oliver described its main characteristics as minimizing disturbance of the soil, maintaining organic residues and using relevant crop rotations.

Regenerative agriculture takes the concepts of conservation agriculture further, aiming not just to conserve but to rebuild soil health and structure. Giller et al. (Reference Giller, Hijbeek, Andersson and Sumberg2021) reviewed 79 references on regenerative agriculture, including its history and agronomy. Both systems discourage soil disturbance by using minimum tillage, but with cover crops and mulches. Both aim to minimize disturbance of soil organisms, and to encourage mycorrhizas. Sheldrake (Reference Sheldrake2021) stressed that mycorrhyzas bind soils, increase water holding capacity and water infiltration, and reduce the leaching of plant nutrients.

Precision agriculture recognizes that fields are seldom uniform, therefore it advocates localized rather than whole field soil analysis and treatment. There is now a global organization for the subject (International Society of Precision Agriculture) and review books have been published: e.g. Oliver et al. (Reference Oliver, Bishop and Marchant2018) and Zhang (Reference Zhang2016). Oliver (Reference Oliver, Oliver, Bishop and Marchant2018) made the point that precision agriculture principles can be applied to sustainable agricultural systems. Charles (Reference Charles2021) claimed that some of the principles of precision agriculture were presaged by the cultivation of random strips within the three-field system of earlier centuries in England, because each strip of about 0.1 to 0.2 ha could be managed separately.

Stoate et al. (Reference Stoate, Leake, Jarvis and Szczur2017) described 25 years of the Allerton Project in Leicestershire, UK. They found that with reduced soil disturbance there were more earthworms and higher microbial biomass. Infiltration was improved and run off reduced in some fields.

Brown (Reference Brown2018), recorded his practical experiences of regenerative agriculture in North Dakota, USA. He offered some principles of soil health, including limited disturbance of the soil, avoiding bare soil, diversity of cropping in rotations and the inclusion of animals. Seed sowing on unploughed ground was with a disc drill. His cover crops were multi-species to encourage a synergy of mycorrhyzas and a range of rooting depths. To increase soil organic matter, he used mob grazing of cattle at high stocking rates moved frequently.

The average cost of ploughing in Britain was recorded as £55.73 to £67.09/ha, depending on soil type and whether contracted or not. Shallow discing was estimated to cost £37.17 to £54.36/ha (Redman, Reference Redman2021).

The Sustainable Food Trust web site (2022) advocates grassland and grazing livestock as an integral part of sustainable farming systems. Fiennes (Reference Fiennes2022), working at the Holkham Estate, Norfolk, where Thomas Coke had farmed (see above), listed 12 suggested cover crops, including 7 nitrogen fixers.

The realization that soils are living habitats containing a range of organisms is not new, having been described in detail by Jackson and Raw (Reference Jackson and Raw1966).

Our composted plot used a compost based on cow manure, so it is interesting that authors such as Stoate et al. (Reference Stoate, Leake, Jarvis and Szczur2017) and Brown (Reference Brown2018) stressed the integration of livestock in sustainable systems, and historic rotations such as the Norfolk four course included ruminant livestock. Yet some modern movements such as veganism advocate the ending of livestock farming. This would not be so readily sustainable, though there are soil improvement systems based on compost, cover crops and companion crops.

Conservation agriculture, regenerative agriculture and organic movements have all rejected monoculture. In addition, both conservation agriculture and regenerative agriculture have dispensed with the plough, yet ploughing has long been regarded as the basis of seed bed creation, as illustrated by the quote above from Hesiod.

Regenerative agriculture raises soil organic matter (Brown, loc.cit.). This encourages earthworms, which Darwin (Reference Darwin1881) described as the ‘natural ploughs of the soil’ (Darwin, Reference Darwin1881; Costa, Reference Costa2017), thus anticipating no plough systems by a century! Thomson (Reference Thomson1939) described the agricultural significance of earthworms as ‘bringing up what was down and gradually bringing down what was up’, as well as aerating the soil.

Parsons (Reference Parsons2017) estimated that 1.5% of global fossil fuel consumption was used in the industrial fixing of nitrogen for fertilisers. Recent world events have made this process more expensive than it was then, thus enhancing the relevance of nitrogen fixing crops.

Does concern for soil care matter? In an analysis of present and future threats to civilization Tallin et al. (Reference Tallin, Rees and Price2017) identified potential food shortages as an example threat. Thus, the use of legumes to fix nitrogen, the encouragement of earthworms, limited soil disturbance, manures and composts, crop rotations and cover crops should be exploited to help feed growing world populations sustainably.

Acknowledgements

Thanks are due to the late Rosalind Bucknall for pointing out the reference of Thomson (Reference Thomson1939). David Charles is grateful for the frequent exchange of information with the late Dr John Wilson (Honorary Librarian of the Royal Agricultural Society of England), and for access to his archives. We are grateful to Chris Davies of Rushcliffe Country Park for arranging for the soil sample analyses.

References

Atkins, J, Hammond, B and Roper, P (1999) A Village Transformed. Keyworth 1750–1850. Nottingham, UK: Keyworth and District Local History Society.Google Scholar
Brown, G (2018) Dirt to Soil: One Family's Journey Into Regenerative Agriculture. White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green Publishing.Google Scholar
Carson, R (1962) Silent Spring. Boston: Houghton Miffin Harcourt.Google Scholar
Cartledge, P (1998) Ancient Greece. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Charles, DR (2002) Food Farming and the Countryside: Past, Present and Future. Nottingham, UK: Nottingham University Press.Google Scholar
Charles, DR (2020a) Sustainable agricultural systems and farm animals: the historical and biological evidence. Journal of Agricultural Science 157, 563565.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Charles, DR (2020b) The analysis of agricultural experiments: a brief history of the techniques of the 20th century. Journal of Agricultural Science 158, 447449.Google Scholar
Charles, DR (2021) On farm experimentation: some historical harbingers. Newsletter of the International Society of Precision Agriculture. Edit. Tremblay, N.Google Scholar
Costa, JT (2017) Darwin's Backyard. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Darwin, C (1881) The Formation of Vegetable Mould Through the Action of Worms, with Observations on Their Habits. London: John Murray, (abstract only seen).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fiennes, J (2022) Land Healer. London: Witness Books.Google Scholar
Fisher, RA and Yates, F (1938) Statistical Tables for Biological, Agricultural and Medical Research. Edinburgh: Oliver and Boyd.Google Scholar
Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (2022) World Soil Day, 5 December Available at fao.org/publications/highlights-detail/en/c/1599787/.Google Scholar
Francis, SA (2013) British Field Crops, 2nd Edn. King's Lynn: Sally Francis.Google Scholar
Giller, KE, Hijbeek, R, Andersson, JA and Sumberg, J (2021) Regenerative agriculture: an agronomic perspective. Outlook on Agriculture 50, 1325.Google ScholarPubMed
Gordon, SH and Charles, DR (2002) Niche and Organic Chicken Products: Their Technology and Scientific Principles. Nottingham, UK: Nottingham University Press.Google Scholar
Hewson, PFS (1986) Origin and development of the British poultry industry: the first hundred years. British Poultry Science 27, 525540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, RM and Raw, F (1966) Life in the Soil. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Jeffreys, H (1961) Theory of Probability, 3rd Edn. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press (abstract only seen).Google Scholar
Lampkin, N (1990) Organic Farming. Ipswich: Old Pond Publishing.Google Scholar
Larsen, CS (2000) Dietary reconstruction and nutritional assessment of past peoples: the bioanthropological record. In Kiple, KF and Ornelas, KC (eds), The Cambridge World History of Food. Cambridge. UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 1334.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyth, P (1989) A History of Nottinghamshire Farming. Newark: Cromwell Press.Google Scholar
Matthews, RAJ (1998) Facts versus Factions: the Use and Abuse of Subjectivity in Scientific Research. Working paper, September 1998. The European Science and Environment Forum, Cambridge.Google Scholar
Miller, N and Wetterstrom, W (2000) The beginnings of agriculture: the ancient near East and North Africa. In Kiple, KL and Ornelas, KR (eds), The Cambridge World History of Food. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, pp. 11231139.Google Scholar
Montgomery, DR (2017) Growing A Revolution: Bringing our Soils Back to Life. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Oliver, MA (2018) An overview of precision agriculture. In Oliver, MA, Bishop, T and Marchant, B (eds), Precision Agriculture for Sustainability and Environmental Protection. Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 319.Google Scholar
Oliver, M, Bishop, T and Marchant, B (2018) Precision Agriculture for Sustainability and Environmental Protection. Abingdon: Routledge.Google Scholar
Parkinson, RJ (2003) Soil management and crop nutrition. In Soffe, RJ (ed.), The Agricultural Notebook. Oxford: Blackwell Science, pp. 362.Google Scholar
Parsons, J (2017) Can we fix it? Biologist (columbus, Ohio) 64, 1215.Google Scholar
Redman, G (2021) The John Nix Pocket Book for Farm Management 2022, 52nd Edn. Melton Mowbray: Agro Business Consultants.Google Scholar
Rundle, JR (1955) Laxton today. In Agriculture. Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. London, UK: HMSO, pp. 170172.Google Scholar
Russell, KM (1952) Fishwick's Dairy Farming, 2nd Edn. London: Crosby Lockwood.Google Scholar
Sheldrake, M (2021) Entangled Life. Dublin: Vintage.Google Scholar
Shorrocks, VM (2017) Conventional and Organic Farming: A Comprehensive Review Through the Lens of Agricultural Science. Sheffield: 5M Publishing.Google Scholar
Stanley, P (1995) Robert Bakewell and the Longhorn Breed of Cattle. Ipswich: Farming Press Books.Google Scholar
Stapledon, RG (1944) The Land Now and Tomorrow, 3rd Edn. London: Faber and Faber.Google Scholar
Stoate, C, Leake, A, Jarvis, P and Szczur, J (2017) Fields for the Future: 25 Years of the Allerton Project. Fordingbridge: Game and Wildlife Conservation Trust.Google Scholar
Tallin, J, Rees, M and Price, H (2017) Centre for the Study of Existential Risk, Cambridge, website. Available at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Centre_for_the_Study_of_Existential_Risk.Google Scholar
Tannahill, R (1988) Food in History. London: Penguin.Google Scholar
Thomson, JA (1939) Biology for Everyman, vol. 1. London: Reader's Union and J.M. Dent, pp. 152155.Google Scholar
Wade Martins, S (1990) “Turnip” Townshend: Statesman and Farmer. North Walsham: Poppyland Publishing.Google Scholar
Wiseman, J (1986) A History of the British Pig. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Wiseman, J (2000) The Pig: a British History. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Younie, D and Wilkinson, JM (2001) Organic Livestock Farming. Lincoln: Chalcombe Publications.Google Scholar
Zhang, Q (2016) Precision Agriculture Technology for Crop Farming. Boca Raton: CRC Press.Google Scholar