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Vitenskapelig artikkel

A pan-European spatial inventory of agricultural land degradation

Remus Prăvălie, Nicuşor Necula, Pasquale Borrelli, Panos Panagos, Emanuele Lugato, Cristiano Ballabio, Amirhossein Hassani, Akash Koppa, Cristian Patriche, Adrian Tișcovschi, Georgeta Bandoc, Bogdan Roșca

Agricultural land degradation is a contemporary reality that increasingly threatens food security and socio-economic stability in Europe and worldwide. Monitoring and controlling this environmental problem are complicated missions, considering that land degradation generally occurs as multiple processes in agricultural environments, which have not yet been thoroughly investigated as an integrated multi-process and multi-scale inventory in Europe. Here we developed a detailed multi-scale (continental to sub-regional) inventory of 12 key agricultural land degradation pathways in Europe, including water erosion, wind erosion, soil organic carbon loss, soil salinization, soil acidification, soil compaction, soil nutrient imbalances, soil pollution via pesticides, soil pollution via heavy metals, vegetation degradation, groundwater decline, and aridity. Using various and (generally) high-resolution geospatial datasets of land degradative pathways, which were mapped at critical levels and statistically explored as a spatial footprint at various territorial levels, we highlighted a complex geographical pattern of agricultural degradation across Europe. Our findings revealed that continental agricultural environments are between 1 and 52 % affected by critical levels of individual degradative processes. Essentially, our results highlighted that soil pollution via pesticides (which impacts 52 % of Europe\'s evaluated agricultural area), soil nutrient imbalances (39 %), soil pollution via heavy metals (31 %), aridity (25 %), water erosion (15 %), and soil compaction (15 %) are the largest threats to European agriculture. Furthermore, using a Land Multi-degradation Index that integrates the critical conditions of all degradative processes, we emphasized that 31 % of pan-European agricultural landscapes are impacted by significant multi-degradation (lands simultaneously affected by at least three co-occurring processes). This general picture of agricultural degradation becomes however increasingly heterogeneous towards the more detailed (national to sub-regional) territorial levels, according to the multiple maps (52) and statistics provided in this unprecedented integrated inventory, which has the potential to support various land degradation-related policies in Europe.

Publikasjonsdetaljer

Tidsskrift: International Soil and Water Conservation Research, vol. In press, 2026

Internasjonalt standardnummer:
Skriv ut: 2095-6339

Vitenskapelig artikkel

År: 2026

Vitenskapelig verdi: LevelOne

Språk: Engelsk

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