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Welcome to the PRSSS

We are a non-governmental, non-profit organization that started in 1983 that connects students, researchers, consultants and professionals studying or working in the field of soil science and related land resource management areas.
  • 2026 PRSSS AGM and Spring Workshop

    Register for the PRSSS-BCCAI AGM, scheduled for March 1st, 2025. Join us for a day spent learning the wonders of soil data science.

  • Meet the PRSSS Executive team!

    Click here to learn more about your PRSSS Executive team.    

REMINDER: CALL FOR SESSION PROPOSALS FOR 2016 CSSS-PRSSS CONFERENCE

By jennaz on October 9, 2015

 This is a reminder that there is less than one month left to submit a session proposal for the CSSS-PRSSS Annual Meeting in Kamloops on May 15-18, 2016.     

Session proposals should include a title, the names and email addresses of one or more organizers/conveners (with the principal contact name underlined) and a meaningful description (< 250 words) in Microsoft Word. Any special requirements/considerations should be included.

For more information on how to put together a successful proposal, please click on this link for a guide to convening a session at the CSSS annual meeting.

These session proposals should be forwarded to: Margaret Schmidt (margaret_schmidt@sfu.ca) with a copy to Maja Krzic (maja.krzic@ubc.ca ) by October 30, 2015. The coordinators will contact the session proposers over the following months so that the accepted session proposals will be posted on the conference website in early December 2015. The Abstract deadline is February 15, 2016. Comments and suggestions are welcome. 

 

Margaret Schmidt (Chair of the Technical Session Committee)

Maja Krzic (Chair of the 2016 CSSS-PRSSS Organizing Committee)

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Photos from the Soil Carbon Symposium and Field Trip are Now Online!

By jennaz on October 2, 2015

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“A Journey through the Soil Time Machine”: Article in Hakai on the soils of Calvert Island, BC

By jennaz on October 2, 2015

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Watch Edward Gregorich’s Keynote Address LIVE!

By jennaz on September 22, 2015

Edward Gregorich, research scientist with Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada, will be giving the keynote address “Soil: Carbon Repository or Mediator?” at the 2015 Soil Carbon Symposium.

To watch his keynote address LIVE on Friday, September 25th at 9 am PDT, follow the instructions below!

—

Meeting Title: Soil Carbon Symposium – Keynote Address

Meeting Time: Friday September 25, 2015 • 9:00 a.m. PDT / 8 hrs

Presentation Duration: 9:15 am – 10:00 am (45 minutes)

Click the blue “Join Meeting” link below to access the meeting on your desktop browser, or on your mobile device (iPhone, Android). You may be prompted to download the free BlueJeans App or Plug-In. You should give yourself about 10 minutes of time to get set up.

 Join Meeting

Just want to dial in on your phone? You will only have access to the presentation audio.
1) Direct-dial with my iPhone or
+1.408.740.7256
+1.408.317.9253 (Alternate number)
+1.888.240.2560 (US Toll Free)
(all numbers)
2) Enter Meeting ID: 911670074

—

Synopsis of Address:

Storing carbon in soils is laudable, but viewed from a systems perspective it may be more important to manage carbon flows rather than storage to sustain multiple ecosystem functions. This perspective views soil as a mediator of energy flows – a reactor or a regulator, rather than a repository of carbon.

Bio:

Research scientist with Agriculture & Agri-Food Canada (Ottawa), Ed Gregorich studies carbon and nitrogen cycling in soil. A fellow of the Canadian and American soil science societies and adjunct professor at Carleton University, he served on the UN International Panel on Climate Change, and is currently editor-in-chief of the Journal of Environmental Quality.

 

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Registration now open for the Fall Field Tour, co-hosted with UBC Soil, Water & Sustainability, September 25-26!

By jennaz on August 6, 2015

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July: Soils are Living (IYS video from SSSA)

By jennaz on July 2, 2015

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PRSSS Soil of the Month: Marble Hill Soil in Abbotsford

By jennaz on June 30, 2015

PRSSS Soil of the Month (June 2015): The Marble Hill Soil in Abbotsford

by Zineb Bazza, President-Elect

Information contained in this post contributed by Elizabeth Kenney and Geoff Hughes-Games.

Location and Extent

The Marble Hill soil occurs mainly in the Abbotsford and Mission municipalities and in the Columbia Valley south of Cultus Lake. It first developed in medium textured eolian deposits overlying gravelly glacial outwash sediments. There are 2120 ha pure map units and 2950 ha of soil complexes dominated by the Marble Hill soil.

The Marble Hill soil belongs to the Podzolic soil order, and is more precisely an Orthic Humo Ferric Podzol.

 

Figure1

Figure 1. Typical profile of a Marble Hill soil (photo credit: Elizabeth Kenney)

Figure2

Figure 2. Marble Hill Soil profile from the PRSSS spring soil ID course (photo credit: Zineb Bazza)

 

 

Why Did We Choose the Marble Hill Soil as a Soil of the Month?

The city of Abbotsford, where the Marble Hill soil occurs, is often referred to as the “Raspberry Capital of Canada”. Marble Hill soils are good agricultural soils and are used to grow a large variety of crops, but they are mainly used for raspberry production. British Columbia produces almost the entire production of raspberries in Canada. This local soil provides the perfect balance between good nutrient and water holding capacity, while providing excellent drainage via the gravelly outwash.

While the Marble Hill soil no longer supports the forests of Abbotsford, it could and has supported coastal Douglas-fir, lodgepole pine and red alder forests.

The gravel present in the subsoil is also used as an important source of aggregate.

Using the 2012 Agricultural Land Use inventory data and the Langley-Vancouver Map Area Soil Survey, we can determine that the Marble Hill soil has supported 443 hectare of raspberries. Adding the 2012 farm gate sales and crop yield data, we can estimate the values of the raspberry crop grown on these soils to be 3.86 million dollars, which accounts for 32% of the total value of the BC raspberry crop in 2012.

 

Summary

British Columbia is proud to be the leader in raspberry production and it can claim that title because of the capability and suitability of the Marble Hill soil series to grow these fruits. The Marble Hill soil has also supported at one time some of the keystone species of BC, including the famous Douglas-fir. Because of its well-drained subsoil, this soil series can also support large infrastructure such as the Abbotsford airport. In summary, the Marble Hill soil series has a key role in agriculture, forestry and human structure, making it an important BC soil.

 

Do you have a suggestion for the July 2015 Soil of the Month? Send your idea to prsssemail@gmail.com before July 15th. Details regarding the importance of this soil for food security or ecosystem function should also be included in your nomination materials.

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Do You Want a World Soils Day Google Doodle? Let Google Know!

By jennaz on June 21, 2015

The Soil Science Society of America is leading a campaign asking soil scientists to write to Google requesting a Google Doodle recognizing World Soils Day on December 5, 2015.

Emails to Google can be sent to proposals@google.com. In your email, personalize why YOU think soils are important and deserve a special Google Doodle recognizing that. Let your soils passion shine through!

**Try to get your email sent to Google by July 15th, 2015 – Google reviews requests for Doodles far in advance.**

For more information on Google Doodles, visit http://www.google.com/doodles/about.

 

Logo_Google_2013_Official.svg

 

 

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June 25th at UBC: Research Cafe to Celebrate the International Year of Soils!

By jennaz on June 19, 2015

Come celebrate International Year of Soils as Professor Maja Krzic of UBC Faculty of Land and Food System’s Soil Science Group presents on Flexible Learning + Soil Science: How We Use Technology to Engage Students.

Thursday, June 25 | 12 – 1 PM
MacMillan 160, University of British Columbia, Vancouver

Tickets are $10 ($5 for registered students) and include a catered lunch. You can register online here.
**The LFS Grad Office is happy to support this LFS Research Cafe event by offering free registration to the first 15 graduate students who RSVP for this event.

Please send your RSVP to shelley.small@ubc.ca to be added to the list.**

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Photos from the 2015 AGM are now online!

By jennaz on June 17, 2015

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