Soil resilience

Soil resilience refers to the ability of a soil to resist or recover their healthy state in response to destabilising influences. This is a subset of a notion of environmental resilience. Soil resistance, a related term refers to the ability of soil to resist changes or the extent to which a soil will recover from any cropping or management change. The term is distinct from Soil resilience as resistance is the inherent capacity to withstand disturbance, while resilience is the capacity to recover after disturbance.[1][2]

  1. ^ Fundamentals of Soil Science. Indian Society of Soil Science. 2012. pp. 643–644.
  2. ^ Arthur, E.; Schjønning, P.; Moldrup, P.; de Jonge, L. W. (2012-03-01). "Soil resistance and resilience to mechanical stresses for three differently managed sandy loam soils". Geoderma. 173–174: 50–60. Bibcode:2012Geode.173...50A. doi:10.1016/j.geoderma.2012.01.007. ISSN 0016-7061.

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