TY - JOUR T1 - Deficiencies in the soil quality concept and its application JF - Journal of Soil and Water Conservation SP - 180 LP - 187 VL - 58 IS - 4 AU - J. Letey AU - R. E. Sojka AU - D. R. Upchurch AU - D. K. Cassel AU - K. R. Olson AU - W. A. Payne AU - S. E. Petrie AU - G. H. Price AU - R. J. Reginato AU - H. D. Scott AU - P. J. Smethurst AU - G. B. Triplett Y1 - 2003/07/01 UR - http://www.jswconline.org/content/58/4/180.abstract N2 - Soil quality is a concept that has deeply divided the soil science community. It has been institutionalized and advocated without full consideration of concept weaknesses and contradictions. Our paper highlights its disfunctional definition, flawed approach to quantification, and failure to integrate simultaneous functions, which often require contradictory soil properties and/or management. While the concept arose from a call to protect the environment and sustain the soil resource, soil quality indexing as implemented may actually impair some soil functions, environmental quality, or other societal priorities. We offer the alternative view that emphasis on known principles of soil management is a better expenditure of limited resources for soil stewardship than developing and deploying subjective indices which fail to integrate across the necessary spectrum of management outcomes. If the soil quality concept is retained, we suggest precisely specifying soil use, not function or capacity, as the criteria for attribute evaluation. Emphasis should be directed toward using available technical information to motivate and educate farmers on management practices that optimize the combined goals of high crop production, low environmental degradation, and a sustained resource. ER -