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{"id":4990,"date":"2021-03-03T19:09:03","date_gmt":"2021-03-03T19:09:03","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/theorganicmagazine.com\/?p=4990"},"modified":"2022-07-06T07:14:14","modified_gmt":"2022-07-06T07:14:14","slug":"nuclear-technologies-help-in-controlling-soil-erosion-and-land-degradation-ask-madagascar","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/theorganicmagazine.com\/editors-pick\/nuclear-technologies-help-in-controlling-soil-erosion-and-land-degradation-ask-madagascar\/","title":{"rendered":"Nuclear technologies for controlling soil Erosion and Land Degradation!"},"content":{"rendered":"
Joseph Randriarimalala and Bodonirina Rasoloarisoa, a farming couple in central-eastern Madagascar, noticed that their half-hectare land was becoming less and less fertile and producing lower yields, but they did not know why and what to do. Now they do \u2013 degradation of their land is the result of increased soil erosion due to the farming approach they used to employ on their hilly terrain.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe used to plant seeds right on the slopes, using machinery to turn the soil around. It turns out that this can lead to a loss of the topsoil layer, the most fertile part of the soil,\u201d said Randriarimalala. Scientists from the country\u2019s National Institute of Nuclear Science and Technology (INSTN Madagascar) used an isotopic technique to evaluate the level of soil erosion on the couple\u2019s plot (see Fallout radionuclides help to assess soil erosion) \u2013 and then used the results to advise farmers in similar situations across the country.<\/p>\n
According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), around one-third of the island\u2019s land resources is degraded \u2013 mostly due to erosion. Erosion does not only deplete the soil, but at the same time impacts terrestrial ecosystems and their biodiversity, and when the eroded soil ends up in rivers and lakes, it affects the viability of aquatic ecosystems as well.<\/p>\n