| Literature DB >> 33945056 |
T Rodríguez-Espinosa1, J Navarro-Pedreño2, I Gómez-Lucas2, M M Jordán-Vidal2, J Bech-Borras3, A A Zorpas4.
Abstract
Authors aim to carry out a bibliographic review as an initial approach to state of the art related to the quality of urban soils, as well as its possible link with human health. This concern arises from the need to highlight the consequences that soil could face, derived from the growth and aging of the population, as well as its predicted preference for urban settlement. Urban development may pose a challenge to the health of urban soils, due to degradative processes that it entails, such as land take, sealing, contamination or compaction. A healthy soil is the one which maintains the capacity to support ecosystem services, so it can provide numerous benefits to human health and well-being (carbon sequestration, protection against flooding, retention and immobilization of pollutants and a growth media for vegetation and food production). This article addresses threats facing urban soils, the strategies put forward by the European Union to deal with them, as well as the issues that require further attention. Greening cities could be a consensual solution, so authors analyze whether soils of cities are ready for that challenge and what resources need to maintain soil ecosystem functions. This review proposes to use made by waste Technosols for a sustainable green city. Although the use of Technosols as a type of soil is very recent, the interest of the scientific community in this field continues to grow.Entities:
Keywords: Anthropogenic soils; Ecosystem services; Green infrastructure; Soil sealing; Wastes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33945056 PMCID: PMC8093134 DOI: 10.1007/s10653-021-00953-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Geochem Health ISSN: 0269-4042 Impact factor: 4.898
Soil threats in Europe
| Soil disturbance | Share of affected soil (EC, 2020a) |
|---|---|
| Contaminated sites | 2.8 million potentially (but only 24% are inventoried) |
| Soil sealed | 2.4% |
| Compaction | 23% |
| Losing carbon | cropland: 0.5% per year; petlands: 50% |
| Residual pesticides | 83% (21% of agricultural soils with cadmium concentrations above the limit for drinking water; and 6% with heavy metal content potentially unsafe por food production) |
| Eutrophication | 65–75% of agricultural soils |
| Water erosion | 24% |
| Desertification | 25% at high or very high risk |
Environmental quality indicators for healthy cities
| Environmental quality indicators | References |
|---|---|
| Air quality, water quality, water and sewage services, noise pollution, radiation, open spaces, infestations and food quality | WHO ( |
| Derelict industrial sites, pedestrianization, sport and leisure facilities | Webster and Sanderson ( |
Land contamination, local food growing, flood risk, overheating, biodiversity | London Healthy Urban Development Unit ( |
| Residential density, land use, urban sprawl and urban heat | Prasad et al. ( |
| Physical, chemical, biological indicators. Presence of metals | Tresch et al. ( |
| Land use and urban design, food environment | Pineo et al. ( |
| Soil quality index | Zambon et al. ( |
| Concentration PM2.5, emission of nitrogen oxides, municipal waste and recycling rate, ground water of good chemical status, CO2 emissions, Natura 2000 area in good quality, urban green areas, soil sealing and surface water of good ecological status | Lafortune et al. ( |
| Soil health to fight rural poverty, for sustainable agriculture and forestry, for healthy and sustainable diets and urban environments, for education. Soil health and landscapes for water, supporting bioenergy production, city greening and urban agriculture, circular bioeconomy. Soil health for climate change mitigation and adaptation, supporting biodiversity and soil health supported by an enabling environment | EC ( |
References related to urban soil pollution in Europe
| Study area | Urban soil quality assessment | References |
|---|---|---|
| Italy land uses (included urban areas) | Soil organic matter content and bulk density in Italy | Constantini and Lorenzetti ( |
| Topsoil, rubble soils, and natural soils in Berlin (Germany) | Heavy metals and benzo[a]pirene | Abel et al. ( |
| Sealed soil with asphalt or concrete, semipermeable and non-sealed soils in Torun (Poland) | Heavy metals and soil sealing | Charzyński et al. ( |
| Urban garden (allotment and home gardens) in Zurich (Switzerland) | Physical, chemical, biological and heavy metals content | Tresch et al. ( |
| Roadside linden trees soil, in Paris (France) | Physical and chemical parameters. Trace elements | Quénéa et al. ( |
| Lawn, forest, urban agriculture, green roof and periurban agriculture soils, in Santiago de Compostela (Spain) | Physical and chemical parameters | Paradelo et al. ( |
| Periurban area soil, designed for residential use, in Madrid (Spain) | As concentration | Baragaño et al. ( |
| Urban and periurban areas (included parks, open spaces, salt marshes, agricultural lands and industrial areas), in Huelva (Spain) | Potentially toxic elements (PTEs) | Guillén et al. ( |
Soil benefits for human health
| Soil benefits | References |
|---|---|
| Protection against rainstorm damage and flooding. Media for vegetation growth | Lehmann ( |
| Allow biochemical cycles | Lehmann ( |
| Macías and Camps Arbestain ( | |
| Erosion control | Macías and Camps Arbestain ( |
| Reduce urban heat island effect | Lehmann ( |
| Bokaie et al. ( | |
| Host biodiversity | EC ( |
| Cultural value and traditional landscape | Constantini and Lorenzetti ( |
| Control pathogens. Provide antibiotics and medicines | Wall et al. ( |
| Urban agriculture for nutritional health and local economy. Personal wellness and community betterment | Kumar and Hundal ( |
| Touristic potential and landscape connectivity | Tobias et al. ( |
| Decontamination (retention phytoremediation and microbial bioremediation) | Lehmann ( |
| Yap and Peng ( | |
| Energy conservation in buildings, preventing acid rain, reduce sound exposure and enhance esthetic value (rooftop with soil) | Cascone ( |
| Circular economy (use of wastes) | Fourvel et al. ( |
| Barredo et al. ( | |
| Ugolini et al. ( | |
| Against climate change effects and to achieve emission neutrality (store organic carbon) | Falkowski et al. ( |
| Lehmann ( | |
| Edmondson et al. ( | |
| Brevik et al. ( | |
| Navarro-Pedreño et al. ( | |
| Montanarella and Panagos ( |
Percentage comparison of green area and citizen satisfaction
| City | % urban green area (Lafortune et al., | % urban green area satisfaction (EC, |
|---|---|---|
| Oslo | 63.72% | 94% |
| Helsinki | 27.68% | 94% |
| Bratislava | 27.52% | 55% |
| Munich | 16.27% | 94% |
| London | 9.72% | 93% |
| Valleta | 7.00% | 44% |
| Athens | 6.90% | 29% |
Fig. 1Number of documents and citations per year
Fig. 2Number of documents and citations related to scope of use (from 2005 to 2020)
Fig. 3Evolution in the number of documents related to scope per use and year