Soils are pivotal for numerous ecosystem services, including delivering food, fibres and biofuels, clean air, drinking water and carbon storage. Many of these ecosystem services are at risk because increased land use intensity, global climate change, urbanization, and other human-induced environmental changes have resulted in loss of soil biodiversity. Restoring soils and soil functioning requires the restoration of physical, chemical and biological soil properties, as well as restoring ecological relationships. We may call this: ‘rewilding soils’. In this course, we will address ways to understand and promote rewilding soils, through exploring how soil ecology operates in healthy and disturbed soils, how complex networks of soil biota may be restored, and how rewilding soils might work in different (agricultural, natural, urban) environments and under a variety of (boreal-temporal-tropic) climatic conditions. We will also explore how international policy and (N)GOs that aim to restore soils operate.
The course is composed of a series of lectures, discussions, group work activities and poster sessions. The course will start on Monday and will run till Friday.
As soon as more detailed information about the programme is available, this will be published here.
Target Group | PhD candidates, postdocs, and other academics |
Group Size | 25-30 participants |
Course duration | 5 days |
Language of instruction | English |
Frequency of recurrence | Every three years |
Number of credits | 1.5 ECTS |
Lecturers | To be determined |
Prior knowledge | Basic knowledge of soil ecology is assumed |
Location | To be determined |
Dr. Gilian van Duijvendijk (PE&RC)
Phone: +31 (0)317 484213
Email: gilian.vanduijvendijk@wur.nl
At this moment, this course is not scheduled yet. However, if you register your interest in this activity below, we will inform you as soon as the course is scheduled and registration of participation is opened.