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Dive into the research topics where Francesca Bampa is active.

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Featured researches published by Francesca Bampa.


Science of The Total Environment | 2014

Current status, uncertainty and future needs in soil organic carbon monitoring☆

Robert Jandl; Mirco Rodeghiero; Cristina Martinez; M. Francesca Cotrufo; Francesca Bampa; Bas van Wesemael; Robert B. Harrison; Iraê Amaral Guerrini; Daniel D. Richter; Lindsey Rustad; Klaus Lorenz; Abad Chabbi; Franco Miglietta

Increasing human demands on soil-derived ecosystem services requires reliable data on global soil resources for sustainable development. The soil organic carbon (SOC) pool is a key indicator of soil quality as it affects essential biological, chemical and physical soil functions such as nutrient cycling, pesticide and water retention, and soil structure maintenance. However, information on the SOC pool, and its temporal and spatial dynamics is unbalanced. Even in well-studied regions with a pronounced interest in environmental issues information on soil carbon (C) is inconsistent. Several activities for the compilation of global soil C data are under way. However, different approaches for soil sampling and chemical analyses make even regional comparisons highly uncertain. Often, the procedures used so far have not allowed the reliable estimation of the total SOC pool, partly because the available knowledge is focused on not clearly defined upper soil horizons and the contribution of subsoil to SOC stocks has been less considered. Even more difficult is quantifying SOC pool changes over time. SOC consists of variable amounts of labile and recalcitrant molecules of plant, and microbial and animal origin that are often operationally defined. A comprehensively active soil expert community needs to agree on protocols of soil surveying and lab procedures towards reliable SOC pool estimates. Already established long-term ecological research sites, where SOC changes are quantified and the underlying mechanisms are investigated, are potentially the backbones for regional, national, and international SOC monitoring programs.


Carbon Management | 2014

Benefits of soil carbon: report on the outcomes of an international scientific committee on problems of the environment rapid assessment workshop

Steve S Banwart; Helaina Black; Zucong Z Cai; P. Gicheru; Hans Joosten; Reynaldo L. Victoria; E. Milne; Elke Noellemeyer; Unai Pascual; Generose Nziguheba; Rodrigo Vargas; André Bationo; Daniel B Buschiazzo; Delphine D de-Brogniez; Jerry M. Melillo; Dan R Richter; Mette Termansen; Meine van Noordwijk; T. Goverse; Cristiano Ballabio; T. Bhattacharyya; Marty M Goldhaber; Nikolaos N Nikolaidis; Yongcun Z Zhao; Roger Funk; Chris Duffy; Genxing P Pan; Newton La Scala; Pia Gottschalk; Niels B Batjes

A Scientific Committee on Problems of the Environment Rapid Assessment (SCOPE-RAP) workshop was held on 18–22 March 2013. This workshop was hosted by the European Commission, JRC Centre at Ispra, Italy, and brought together 40 leading experts from Africa, Asia, Europe and North and South America to create four synthesis chapters aimed at identifying knowledge gaps, research requirements, and policy innovations. Given the forthcoming publication by CABI of a book volume of the outcomes of the SCOPE-RAP in 2014, this workshop report provides an update on the global societal challenge of soil carbon management and some of the main issues and solutions that were identified in the four working sessions.


Frontiers in Environmental Science | 2015

Making the Most of Our Land: Managing Soil Functions from Local to Continental Scale

R.P.O. Schulte; Francesca Bampa; Marion Bardy; Cait Coyle; Rachel E. Creamer; Reamonn Fealy; Ciro Gardi; Bhim Bahadur Ghaley; Phil Jordan; Hjalmar Laudon; Cathal O'Donoghue; Daire Ó'hUallacháin; Lilian O'Sullivan; M. Rutgers; Johan Six; Gergely L. Toth; Dirk Vrebos

The challenges of achieving both food security and environmental sustainability have resulted in a confluence of demands on land within the European Union (EU): we expect our land to provide food, fibre and fuel, to purify water, to sequester carbon, and provide a home to biodiversity as well as external nutrients in the form of waste from humans and intensive livestock enterprises. All soils can perform all of these five functions, but some soils are better at supplying selective functions. Functional Land Management is a framework for policy-making aimed at meeting these demands by incentivising land use and soil management practices that selectively augment specific soil functions, where required. Here, we explore how the demands for contrasting soil functions, as framed by EU policies, may apply to very different spatial scales, from local to continental scales. At the same time, using Ireland as a national case study, we show that the supply of each soil function is largely determined by local soil and land use conditions, with large variations at both local and regional scales. These discrepancies between the scales at which the demands and supply of soil functions are manifested, have implications for soil and land management: while some soil functions must be managed at local (e.g. farm or field) scale, others may be offset between regions with a view to solely meeting national or continental demands. In order to facilitate the optimisation of the delivery of soil functions at national level, to meet the demands that are framed at continental scale, we identify and categorise 14 policy and market instruments that are available in the EU. The results from this inventory imply that there may be no need for the introduction of new specific instruments to aid the governance of Functional Land Management. We conclude that there may be more merit in adapting existing governance instruments by facilitating differentiation between soils and landscapes.


Global Change Biology | 2014

A new baseline of organic carbon stock in European agricultural soils using a modelling approach.

Emanuele Lugato; Panos Panagos; Francesca Bampa; Arwyn Jones; Luca Montanarella


Global Change Biology | 2014

Potential carbon sequestration of European arable soils estimated by modelling a comprehensive set of management practices

Emanuele Lugato; Francesca Bampa; Panos Panagos; Luca Montanarella; Arwyn Jones


Ecological Indicators | 2013

Estimating soil organic carbon in Europe based on data collected through an European network

Panos Panagos; Roland Hiederer; Marc Van Liedekerke; Francesca Bampa


Environmental development | 2015

Soil carbon, multiple benefits

E. Milne; Steven A. Banwart; Elke Noellemeyer; David James Abson; Cristiano Ballabio; Francesca Bampa; André Bationo; N.H. Batjes; Martial Bernoux; T. Bhattacharyya; Helaina Black; Daniel E. Buschiazzo; Zucong Cai; Carlos Eduardo Pellegrino Cerri; Kun Cheng; Claude Compagnone; Rich Conant; Heitor Luiz da Costa Coutinho; Delphine de Brogniez; Fabiano de Carvalho Balieiro; Christopher Duffy; Christian Feller; E. C. C. Fidalgo; Cristiane Figueira da Silva; Roger Funk; Greta Gaudig; Patrick T. Gicheru; Marty M Goldhaber; Pia Gottschalk; Frederic Goulet


Sustainability | 2017

The Impact of Policy Instruments on Soil Multifunctionality in the European Union

Dirk Vrebos; Francesca Bampa; Rachel E. Creamer; Ciro Gardi; Bhim Bahadur Ghaley; Arwyn Jones; M. Rutgers; Taru Sandén; Jan Staes; Patrick Meire


Soil Use and Management | 2017

Soil protection for a sustainable future: options for a soil monitoring network for Ireland

Lilian O'Sullivan; Francesca Bampa; K. Knights; Rachel E. Creamer


Archive | 2015

A strategy for taking soil carbon into the policy arena.

B. van Wesemael; M. Stocking; Francesca Bampa; Martial Bernoux; Christian Feller; P. T. Gicheru; Philippe Lemanceau; E. Milne; Luca Montanarella; S. A. Banwart; Elke Noellemeyer

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Rachel E. Creamer

Wageningen University and Research Centre

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E. Milne

Colorado State University

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Elke Noellemeyer

National University of La Pampa

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Arwyn Jones

University of Ljubljana

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Martial Bernoux

Institut de recherche pour le développement

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Marty M Goldhaber

United States Geological Survey

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T. Bhattacharyya

Indian Council of Agricultural Research

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