Understanding Soils of Mountainous Landscapes 2023
DOI: 10.1016/b978-0-323-95925-4.00019-4
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Mountain soils and climate change: importance, threats and mitigation measures

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Cited by 4 publications
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“…This is particularly the case with mountains (Baruck et al, 2016;Guerra et al, 2020), even though mountain soils are critical for many ecosystem processes, functions, and services, and their maintenance and stability are particularly important in terms of hazards and natural risk management (FAO, 2015;Stanchi et al, 2023). Given that mountain soils can take thousands of years to develop (up to 1000 years for 2-3 cm in (high) alpine areas (Stanchi et al, 2023), their degradation and gradual erosion as a result of overexploitation and poor management may ultimately lead to a loss of biodiversity and associated ecosystem collapse, with no option for recovery (Körner, 2021;Singh et al, 2023). It emphasises the complexity of ecological restoration, pointing out that while repairing functions and maintaining existing taxa is feasible to some extent, the irreversible loss of certain locally adapted species, especially in isolated environments like nunataks, is a significant concern.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is particularly the case with mountains (Baruck et al, 2016;Guerra et al, 2020), even though mountain soils are critical for many ecosystem processes, functions, and services, and their maintenance and stability are particularly important in terms of hazards and natural risk management (FAO, 2015;Stanchi et al, 2023). Given that mountain soils can take thousands of years to develop (up to 1000 years for 2-3 cm in (high) alpine areas (Stanchi et al, 2023), their degradation and gradual erosion as a result of overexploitation and poor management may ultimately lead to a loss of biodiversity and associated ecosystem collapse, with no option for recovery (Körner, 2021;Singh et al, 2023). It emphasises the complexity of ecological restoration, pointing out that while repairing functions and maintaining existing taxa is feasible to some extent, the irreversible loss of certain locally adapted species, especially in isolated environments like nunataks, is a significant concern.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%