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Science 12 August 1977:
Vol. 197. no. 4304, pp. 625 - 630
DOI: 10.1126/science.197.4304.625

Articles

Soil Deterioration and the Growing World Demand for Food

R. A. Brink 1, J. W. Densmore 2, and G. A. Hill 2

1 Professor emeritus of genetics, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53706
2 Staff member of the Dane County (Wisconsin) Soil and Water Conservation District cooperating with the Environmental Resources Division of the Dane County Regional Planning Commission

A recent survey of five watersheds in south-central Wisconsin, where corn is now the dominant annual crop, illustrates the soil erosion damage that is occurring on sloping land under modern agricultural technology and prevailing market forces. In 70 percent of the 93 quarter-sections sampled, estimated soil losses, on the average, were more than twice the amounts considered compatible with permanent agriculture. Scattered studies by others indicate that the findings are meaningful for a large area in the United States when row cropping is prevalent on sloping soils.

Pressures on cultivated land, in general, are mounting rapidly because of the rising demand for meat in industrialized nations and the soaring numbers of marginally fed people in Third World countries. The world population-food problem makes increasing stress on U.S. soils inevitable in the foreseeable future. Adequate protection against excessive loss of productive topsoil requires that the level of publicly supported soil conservation activities be promptly adjusted to this circumstance.


THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES:
Soil erosion and agricultural sustainability.
D. R. Montgomery (2007)
PNAS 104, 13268-13272
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