Horizon 2020 program Soil biodiversity and its contribution to ecosystem services
HORIZON-MISS-2022-SOIL-01-03 grant ID 101112374
Total budget is 7,398,540.00 EUR.
Project partners are Universidad Politecnica de Cartagena (leading partner; Spain), Universidad de Vigo (Spain), LGi Sustainable Innovation (France), Instituut Voor Landbouw-, Visserij- en Voendingsonderzoek (ILVO, Belgium), Johann Heinrich von Thünen Institute Federal Research Institute for Rural Areas, Forestry and Fisheries (Germany), Consiglio per la ricerca in agricoltura e l'analisi dell'economia agraria (CREA, Italy), Zabala Innovation Consulting SA (Spain), Centro Euro-Mediterraneosui Cambiamenti Climatici (Italy), Spanish National Research Council (CSIC, Spain), Technical University of Munich (Germany), Wageningen University (Netherlands), LVMI "Silava", University of Tuscia (Italy), June Communications SRL (Romania), Soluciones Agricolas Cultivate SL (Spain), Fundacion Juana de Vega (Germany), Flachenagentur Rheinland GMBH (Germany), Rīgas meži Ltd." (Latvia) and others.
The main objective of BIOservicES is to understand the interconnection between soil organisms (virus, bacteria, archaea, fungi, protists, nematodes, microarthropods, earthworms, isopods, millipedes, insects and spiders) and the delivery of multiple soil ecosystem functions and services at different scales (field vs landscape), identifying the pressures and drivers resulting from different land uses and climate change, and performing an economic valuation of the contribution of soil organisms to ecosystem services. BIOservicES will also deepen in the relationship between soil organisms and soil structure, and how this interaction is affected by land use and management intensity, to contribute to the Soil Mission objective 6 "Improve soil structure to enhance habitat quality for soil biota and crops". BIOservisES will thus deliver new knowledge, new indicators based on soil organisms and the ecosystem functions and services in which they are involved and digital decision-support tools and models to help design climate resilient management practices and monitoring/conservation/restoration programmes adapted to a range of environments (land uses and biogeographic regions) across Europe, to maintain and foster the multiple soil ecosystem functions and services in which soil organisms are involved. It will also give relevance to soil health and soil ecosystem functions and services delivered by soil organisms in the update of EU and National legislations. For this, BIOservicES is using experimental sites across 8 land uses and 5 biogeographic regions from Europe, as central hubs for co-creation and co-design (multi-actor approach, responsible research and innovation (RRI) and open science).