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Soil Science Society of America Journal 64:2187 (2000)
© 2000 Soil Science Society of America

COMMENTS & LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Letter to the Editor on "World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB), IUSS Endorsement, World-Wide Testing, and Validation"

Jozef Deckers and K.U. Leuven

Belgium

This letter is submitted to inform the readership of the Soil Science Society of America Journal of the activities of International Union of Soil Science (IUSS) to develop a World Reference Base for Soil Resources (WRB).

It has been a matter of great concern that after 100 yr of modern soil science a generally accepted system of soil classification has not yet been universally adopted (Dudal, 1990). In order to remedy this, a working group of the IUSS has been developing a common language (the WRB) for naming the soils of the world (ISSS Working Group RB, 1998a).

The main objective of the WRB is to provide an easy means for scientists to identify, characterize, and name major types of soils. It is not meant to replace national soil classification systems, but to be a tool to foster correlation and accommodation among systems, starting with the highest categories.

The principles of the WRB were laid down in the Sofia consultation (Dudal, 1980, p. 19–20):

The WRB is meant to be a comprehensive classification system that may serve as a reference for the development of new or revision of existing national soil classification systems. It is comprised of two tiers of categorical detail:

  1. The Reference Base consists of 30 reference soil groups and is limited to the first level.
  2. The WRB Classification System consists of combinations of a set of prefixes as unique modifiers added to the reference soil groups, allowing very precise characterization and classification of individual soil profiles.

The building-block approach is the most important innovation in the WRB. Exclusive use is made of standard definitions for each subdivision name (modifier) of a Soil Reference Group. The building blocks are the 121 uniquely defined modifiers (FAO, 1998). These building blocks are used to define the lower–level subunit. For example, to classify a reddish colored Vertisol with a calcic horizon one would follow the priority list (FAO, 1998) and note that modifiers "calcic" and "chromic" apply. Therefore, the soil is classified as a Chromi-Calcic Vertisol.

Since its endorsement by the IUSS at Montpellier in 1998, the WRB has been translated and published in French, German, Spanish, Italian, and Lithuanian. Negotiations are under way for translations into Japanese, Chinese, Russian, Arabic, Portuguese, and Indonesian. Furthermore, the WRB is currently being used as a base for restructuring a number of national soil classification systems such as in Vietnam and Australia. The IUSS Working Group RB is strongly supporting these initiatives by organizing soil correlation meetings with National Soil Science Societies (Vietnam, 1998; China, 1998; Spain, 1999; Sicily, 1999; Caucasian Georgia, 2000; Benin, 2000). The WRB has received world-wide attention through its published books: Introduction (ISSS Working Group, 1998a), Atlas (ISSS Working Group RB, 1998b), Key (FAO, 1998), and peer-reviewed publications (Sumner, 1999, p. 137–152, and Nachtergaele et al., 2000).FAO/ISRIC/ISSS 1998; ISSS Working Group 1998

Received for publication December 7, 1999.

REFERENCES





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