The long history of the Mediterranean records striking examples of success and
failure of land use models and management practices, which, in the latter case,
are a heavy heritage for the soil resource in this basin. At present day, many
forms of soil degradation threaten Mediterranean soils as, for instance,
salinization, pollution, structural degradation and erosion. There is a
geographical pattern of distribution of these forms of soil degradation and soil
erosion is first in rank as far as sloping areas are concerned. Corresponding to a
very large surface of Mediterranean land, these are especially sensitive areas,
where soils are a qualitatively scarce resource.
Sloping Mediterranean agri-environments heir a very significant part of
cropping systems, crops and products traditional of the basin, vineyards and
olive groves being the most relevant ones. Improvements in productivity and
economic income of these areas are imperative to reduce population depletion
and its impacts on territory sustainability. On the other hand, the long-term
cultivated and highly eroded slopes ask for alternative land use models and
management options that allow recovery of already much degraded
environments. The importance of sloping areas, their land uses and misuses,
comes also from their hydrological key role that, in the Mediterranean, has large
consequences for water conservation, flood hazard and off-site effects of soil
erosion.
Soil protection initiatives are needed to cope with the threats to soil resource
highlighted above. The thematic strategy for soil protection in Europe clearly
sets the topic in high priority at policy level, as the need for soil protection is
there stated in specific terms. This new political background encourages defining
specifically oriented rationale in view soil protection measures design and
implementation. Actually, expertise acquired in the last couple of decades
throughout Europe, as part of the European strong research efforts in the topic,
shows the high level of specialization necessary to tackle with soil protection
issues. The still growing research-borne information has to be converted into
technically useful tools for ―real world‖ problem solving. The thematic strategy
for soil protection in Europe asks for such a challenge and problems posed on
Mediterranean sloping areas are certainly important test-subjects.
Foreword
T. de Figueiredo & N. Evelpidou
vi
Figueiredo & Evelpidou
As requirements stated in regulations eventually issued from the thematic
strategy for soil protection in Europe become more specific, demand is expected
to grow for technical staff able to deal with the design and implementation of soil
protection measures. This is why and what for SPinSMEDE was designed,
planned and organized.
SPinSMEDE, acronym for Soil Protection in Sloping Mediterranean Agri-
Environments, labels an Erasmus Intensive Programne that first took place in
spring 2008, in Portugal, at Escola Superior Agrária of the Instituto Politécnico
de Bragança. Intensive Programmes, within the Lifelong Learning Programme,
are short duration higher education programmes, fully creditated within the
ECTS framework. They stem on a transnational partnership of EU Universities,
where students and professors come from, as in an Erasmus mobility scheme.
For SPinSMEDE two-week and 6 credits Intensive Programme, the Polytechnic
Institute of Bragança, the co-ordinating institution, promoted a partnership
including the Wageningen University (The Netherlands), the National and
Kapodistrian University of Athens (Greece), the University of Lleida (Spain), and
the Unversity of Santiago de Compostela (Spain).
The book objectives, target audience and general sequence of subjects, are all
the same as those defined for the programme itself. Therefore, it is aimed at
providing basic tools to assess soil degradation and to design soil protection
initiatives in Mediterranean sloping areas. Rooted in both the EU thematic
strategy for soil protection in Europe and the special environmental sensitivity of
Mediterranean slopes, it is oriented towards the capacitation in such specific
issue of post-graduation students, especially those with background in
agricultural, forest or environmental engineering and those from life or earth
sciences.
The programme comprises two main parts, and this is reflected in the book
contents. In order to allow a better insight on the Mediterranean environment,
the texts of overview lectures addressed to geography and geology, climate,
soils and vegetation are also presented. Background subjects, the first part,
addresses soil degradation processes and assessment, soil protection measures
design and implementation applying technical and socio-economic criteria. It is
intended to provide the base knowledge necessary to better understand subjects
treated in the second part. Selected case studies are presented and explored in
the second part, and they concern land use typical of Mediterranean slopes, such
as vineyards, olive groves, forests or shrubs. Not by chance, the book falls
somewhere between the classical text book and the professionally oriented
handbook. As so, after a more theorectically developed topic, the reader may
find exercises that set the necessary links with ―real world‖ conditions and
problems, and that guide in the application of methods to approach it. This book assembles the texts and reading material of most of the lectures and
exercises given during the two editions of SPinSMEDE, the 2008, held in
Bragança, and the 2009, held in Athens (a third edition is planned for spring
2010, in Santiago de Compostela). It is felt as a still in progress work, because
the relevance of this thematic seemingly requires the attention of a wider
audience than the one it may reach now, and, in turn, this goal asks for editorial
refinements that, for the moment, could not be achieved according to
expectations. Editors and contributors deeply wish their work to serve the
outstanding and demanding cause of soil resource protection in the
Mediterranean sloping agri-environments.