Dear Customer
Our Customer Service will be available again as of 2 January 2025.
Please note that new registrations and requests to be processed manually will only be processed from this point onwards.
You can of course place orders and receive downloads online at any time.
We wish you happy holidays, a peaceful time and a healthy New Year!
Your DIN Media
Standard [CURRENT]
Product information on this site:
Quick delivery via download or delivery service
All transactions are encrypted
This part of ISO 23611 provides guidance for the design of field studies with soil invertebrates (for example for the monitoring of the quality of a soil as a habitat for organisms). Detailed information on the sampling of the most important soil organisms is provided in the other parts of this International Standard (ISO 23611-1 to ISO 23611-5). This part of ISO 23611 is used for all terrestrial biotopes in which soil invertebrates occur. Basic information on the design of field studies in general is already laid down in ISO 10381-1. This information can vary according to the national requirements or the climatic/regional conditions of the site to be sampled. While this part of ISO 23611 aims to be applicable globally for all terrestrial sites that are inhabited by soil invertebrates, the existing information refers mostly to temperate regions. However, the (few) studies from other (tropical and boreal) regions, as well as theoretical considerations, allow the conclusion that the principles laid down in this part of ISO 23611 are generally valid. This part of ISO 23611 gives information on site-specific risk assessment of contaminated land, study of potential side effects of anthropogenic impacts (for example the application of chemicals or the building of roads), the biological classification and assessment of soils in order to determine the biological quality of soils, and longterm biogeographical monitoring in the context of nature protection or restoration, including global change (for example as in long-term ecological research projects). The committee responsible for this standard is NA 119-01-02-04 UA "Biologische Verfahren" ("Biological Methods") at DIN.