Soil depletion occurs when the components which contribute to fertility are removed and not replaced, and the conditions which support soil's fertility are not maintained. This leads to poor crop yields, now becoming a global problem. In agriculture, soil depletion can be due to excessively
intensive cultivation and inadequate
soil management. Depletion may occur through a variety of other effects, including over-
tillage (which damages
soil structure), overuse of nutrient inputs which leads to mining of the
soil nutrient bank, and
salinization of soil.
Colonial impacts on soil depletion Soil fertility can be severely challenged when
land-use changes rapidly. For example, in
Colonial New England,
colonists made a number of decisions that depleted the soils, including: allowing herd animals to wander freely, not replenishing soils with manure, and a sequence of events that led to erosion.
William Cronon wrote that "...the long-term effect was to put those soils in jeopardy. The removal of the forest, the increase in destructive floods, the soil compaction and close-cropping wrought by grazing animals, ploughing—all served to increase erosion." Cronon continues, explaining, "Where mowing was unnecessary and grazing among living trees was possible, settlers saved labor by simply burning the forest undergrowth...and turning loose their cattle...In at least one ill-favored area, the inhabitants of neighboring towns burned so frequently and graze so intensively that...the timber was greatly injured, and the land became hard to subdue...In the long run, cattle tended to encourage the growth of woody, thorn-bearing plants which they could not eat and which, once established, were very difficult to remove". These practices were methods of simplifying labor for colonial settlers in new lands when they were not familiar with traditional
Indigenous agricultural methods. Those Indigenous communities were not consulted but rather forced out of their
homelands so European settlers could commodify their resources. The practice of intensive land burning and turning loose cattle ruined soil fertility and prohibited
sustainable crop growth. However, without consideration of the intensity, seasonality, and frequency of the burns, the conservation of biodiversity and the overall health of the soil can be negatively impacted by fire. In addition to
soil erosion through using too much fire, colonial agriculture also resulted in
topsoil depletion. is eroded or depleted of its original organic material. The
Dust Bowl in the
Great Plains of North America is a great example of this with about one-half of the original topsoil of the Great Plains having disappeared since the beginning of agricultural production there in the 1880s. Outside of the context of colonialism, many past civilizations' collapses can be attributed to topsoil depletion.
Soil depletion and enslavement As historian
David Silkenat explains, the goals of Southern plantation and
slave owners, instead of measuring
productivity based on outputs per acre, were to maximize the amount of labor that could be extracted from the enslaved
workforce. The landscape was seen as disposable, and the African slaves were seen as expendable. Once these Southern farmers forced slaves to engage in mass
deforestation, they would discard the land and move towards more fertile prospects. The forced slave practices created extensive destruction on the land. The environmental impact included draining
swamps, clearing forests for
monocropping and fuel
steamships, and introducing
invasive species, all leading to fragile
ecosystems. In the aftermath, these ecosystems left hillsides eroded, rivers clogged with sterile soil, and extinction of native species.
Silkenat summarizes this phenomenon of the relationship between enslavement and soil, "Although typically treated separately, slavery and the environment naturally intersect in complex and powerful ways, leaving lasting effects from the period of emancipation through modern-day reckonings with racial justice…the land too fell victim to the slave owner's lash".
Global Soil Depletion One of the most widespread occurrences of soil depletion is in tropical zones where
nutrient content of soils is low. lack of soil (
soil erosion), and lack of
irrigation. The
Middle East has three countries that indicate a decline in crop production, the highest rates of productivity decline being found in hilly and dryland areas. Many countries in Africa also undergo a depletion of fertile soil, in particular in
sub-Saharan Africa (
Sahel) under high
population pressure. In regions of
arid climate like
Sudan and the countries that make up the
Sahara Desert, droughts and soil degradation are common, aggravataed by badly-adapted
agricultural practices. Cash crops such as teas, maize, and beans require a high variety and quantity of nutrients in order to grow healthy and sustain population growth. Soil fertility has declined in the farming regions of Africa and the use of artificial and natural
fertilizers has been used to regain the nutrients of ground soil. == Dark Earths ==