Abstract:
Fertility is the most important soil characteristic and is defined by all its physical, chemical and biological features,
which provide the plants with the necessary amounts of nutrients during their vegetation. Land generally has a natural
fertility formed during the soil genesis process and an artificial fertility which is the result of human intervention, in the
natural soil evolution, by breeding improvement measures. Agricultural land quality is determined by land quality and
productivity assessment, according to which agricultural land in Romania is classified in five quality categories. Land
quality and productivity assessment is conducted on land areas as homogeneous as possible from the viewpoint of its
environmental conditions and vegetation factors. In the Ion Neculce administrative-territorial unit, the 76 simple soil
units and 14 complex soil units identified, belonging to the Protisoils, Cernisoils, Luvisoils, Hydrisoils, Salsodisoils and
Antrisoils classes, were included, depending on their slope and exposure, in elementary land units, which resulted in
340 simple ecologically homogeneous territories and 91 complex ones. Relying on the land quality and productivity
assessment grades calculated for the 431 ecologically homogeneous territories, we decided that the surveyed land
belonged to the arable use category, i.e. to II, III, IV and V quality classes. 48% of the total mapped area of 6338 ha
belongs to the lower quality classes, namely IV and V, 39% to the III quality class and only 13% to the higher II quality
class.