The term soil health is used to describe the state of a soil in: • Sustaining plant and animal productivity (agronomic focus); • Enhancing
biodiversity (
Soil biodiversity) (ecological focus); • Maintaining or enhancing
water and
air quality (environmental/climate focus); • Supporting
human health and
habitation. •
sequestering carbon The phrase "soil health" has largely replaced the older "soil quality". The primary difference between the two expressions is that soil quality was focused on the ability of the soil serve a particular purpose, as in "quality of soil for
maize production" or "quality of soil for
roadbed preparation" and so on. The word "health" shifted the perception to be an integrative,
holistic, and systematic view of the soil's ability to function as a self-sustaining system. The two expressions still overlap considerably. Soil health as an expression derives from organic or "biological farming" movements in Europe, however, well before soil quality was first applied as a discipline around 1990. In 1978, Swiss soil biologist Dr Otto Buess wrote an essay "The Health of Soil and Plants" which largely defines the field even today. The underlying principle in the use of the term "soil health" is that soil is not just an inert, lifeless growing medium, which modern
intensive farming tends to represent, rather it is a living, dynamic and ever-so-subtly changing whole environment. It turns out that soils highly
fertile from the point of view of crop productivity are also lively from a biological point of view. It is now commonly recognized that soil
microbial biomass is large: in temperate grassland soil the bacterial and fungal biomass have been documented to be 1–/
hectare and 2–/ha, respectively. Some microbiologists now believe that 80% of
soil nutrient functions are essentially controlled by microbes. Using the human health analogy, a healthy soil can be categorized as one: • In a state of composite well-being in terms of biological, chemical and physical properties; • Not diseased or infirmed (i.e. not
degraded, nor degrading), nor causing negative off-site impacts; • With each of its qualities cooperatively functioning such that the soil reaches its full potential and resists degradation; • Providing a full range of functions (especially nutrient,
carbon and
water cycling) and in such a way that it maintains this capacity into the future. == Conceptualisation ==