Dataset information
Available languages
German
Keywords
Nährstoffhaushalt, opendata, Karten, Bodenfunktion, ENVI, Nährstoffkreislauf, gdi-sh, Bodenbewertung, Landschaftsplanung, S-Wert, Landschaftsrahmenplan, Landschaftsprogramm, Landschaftsplan, BBodSchG, Bundes-Bodenschutzgesetz, Naturhaushalt, Kationenaustauschkapazität, KAK, Nährstoffverfügbarkeit, natürliche Bodenfunktion
Dataset description
The so-called S-value is a characteristic value for assessing the soil as part of nutrient retention and is evaluated by the nutrient availability. The S-value is the amount of nutrients (cations, not nitrate, e.g. nitrate) that a soil can interchangeably bind to clay, humus particles, oxides and hydroxides (cation exchange capacity). The S-value is therefore well suited to describe the nutrient availability. Similar to the field capacity in the effective root space (FKwe), high levels of clay, humus, as well as a large effective root space require a high S-value and vice versa. The pH value also has a great influence on the S-value. The pH value can fluctuate in a wide range depending on the use. The higher the S-value, the more nutrients the soil can bind to exchangers. Nutrient inputs via air or fertilisation are thus protected from discharge with the leachate. At the same time, this ensures a more even supply of nutrients to the plants. The S-value evaluates a natural soil function in accordance with § 2(2) BBodSchG, in accordance with point 1.b) as part of the natural balance, in particular with its water and nutrient cycles. The criterion chosen for this purpose is the nutrient availability with the characteristic value S-value. The maps are available for the following scale levels: — 1: 1,000-10 000 for high-resolution or parcel-sharp planning, — 1: 10,001-35,000 for municipal planning, — 1: 35.001-100,000 for planning in larger regions, — 1: 100.001-350,000 for nationally differentiated planning, — 1: 350,001-1000,000 for nationwide to nationwide planning. In this representation, the S-value is classified regionally. Under the title “Soil assessment — nutrient availability in the effective root space (SWE), nationally evaluated” there is a classification of the S-value, which represents the S-value uniform across the natural space borders across the country.
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