Biohabitats’ Leaf Litter
Vol. 3 Number 4
http://www.biohabitats.com/ndg_newsite/newsletter/number.12/newsletter.htm

Thoughts on Soil

Soil. It is one of the most essential natural resources on our planet, alongside air and water. It is, literally, the foundation for life. In fact, a mere teaspoonful of soil is believed to contain over 4 billion microorganisms (more than half of the human population)!

Soil growth is so slow, it is considered a non-renewable resource. The process of soil formation can take thousands of years. Yet threats such as erosion, climate change, deforestation, agriculture, resource extraction, pollution and poor land management are endangering soil all over the world.

Restoration efforts using compost material, plants, microbial communities, prescribed fire, land imprinting, and other methods are out there, but in general, when it comes to ecological restoration and conservation planning, this vulnerable, critical resource is often treated with little regard.

In this issue of Leaf Litter we attempt to bring this “dirty” issue to the surface, unearthing useful information, helpful resources and inspiring soil restoration pioneers along the way.

Further Reading

Get to know Water Resources Engineer Jake Radeff
Meet Conservation Biologist Nolan Schillerstrom
Get to know Allyson Gibson, Biohabitats Extern
Get to Know Graphic Designer Joey Marshall
Evolution: A New Leadership Team for Biohabitats

More From This Author

The stark reality of post-apocalyptic film locations
A Look at the Degree of Conservation Along the Colorado River: a guest blog post by freelance writer Meika Jensen
Thoughts on Biocultural and Ecogastronomic Restoration
Thoughts on Water Conservation and Ecology
Role of art in ecological restoration, conservation & regenerative design