Title: Chemical
1Soil Health for Organic Production
Chemical
Charles Mitchell, Auburn University Alisha
Rupple, University of Arkansas Heather Friedrich,
University of Arkansas
2What is soil?
- Surface mineral layer of the earth that is mixed
with organic matter (living and non-living) that
serves as a growing media for land plants - Combination of biological, physical, and chemical
processes, particular to regions and climates
3Agriculture / growing plants
4Three Main Soil Components
- 50 Pore Space
- 25 Water-filled
- 25 Air-filled
- 45 Mineral Material
- 5 Organic Matter
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6Soil Health
- Overlapping of the physical, chemical, and
biological properties - General picture of soils capacity to support
plant growth without degradation (sustainability)
Physical
Chemical
Biological
7Physical
Chemical
Biological
8Texture
- Proportion of sand, silt, and clay particles
- The ideal texture depends on which crop will be
grown. - Potatoes grow best in a sandy soil while rice
grows best in clay soil. - Sand good drainage, ease of cultivation, dries
easily, nutrients lost to leaching - Clay good water-holding capacity, high CEC,
holds nutrients, easily compacted, poor drainage
9Soil Texture Triangle
10Soil Structure
- Arrangement of soil particles into stabilized
aggregates - Affected by texture and organic matter content
Soil aggregates
- Soil organisms break down organic residues,
producing glomalin that stabilizes aggregates - Idealgranular or crumb
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12Benefits of Good Structure
- Resist wind and water erosion
- Maintain low bulk density
- Increased pore space
- Increased water storage
- Better water percolation
- Increased aeration
- Ease of cultivation
- Allows root penetration
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15Chemical
Physical
Biological
16Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC)
- Cation Exchange the replacement of one adsorbed
cation by another cation free in solution - CEC quantity of exchangeable cation sites per
unit weight dry soil - Dependent on structure, texture, and organic
matter content - Greatly influences nutrient availability and
retention
17CEC in Various Soil Types
Soil Type Typical CEC meq/100 g
Light colored sand 3-5
Dark colored sand 10-20
Loams 10-15
Silt loams 15-25
Clay and clay loams 20-50
Organic soils 50-100
18CEC and Soil Management
- Exchangeable Ca2 , Mg2 , and K major source of
plant Ca2 , Mg2 , and K - Amount of lime needed to raise pH dependent on
CEC (gtCEC gt lime) - Cation exchange sites hold Ca2, Mg2 , K, NH4,
and Na ions and reduce leaching - Cation exchange sites adsorb many metals (Cd2,
Zn2, , Ni2, , Pb2, )that might be present in
waste water. -
19pH
- -log H measure of acidity/alkalinity of soil
- Soils under field conditions vary from 3.5-10.0
- 5.5-8.5 range for most crops
- Strongly acidic soils- Al3 and Mn2 at toxic
level microbial activity reduced Ca2, Mg2 ,
and K limited fungi favored - Strongly alkaline soils- Fe2 , Zn2 , Cu2 ,
Mn2, and P limited salinity toxicity
20pH Effects on Nutrient Availability
21Physical
Chemical
Biological
22Soil Organic Matter
- Ranges from 1-5 in most soils
- Living fraction roots, microorganisms, soil
fauna - Alkaline soil favors bacteria
- Acidic soil favors fungi, mites, collembola
- Neutral soil favors earthworms, termites
- Non-living fraction surface litter, dead roots,
microbial metabolites, humus - Greatest concentration in the top 6 inches
23Components of Soil OM
24Earthworms
- Improve soil structure by ingesting organic
matter and soil and excreting stable aggregates - Aerate and stir soil, which improves water
infiltration and root penetration
Generally live in top 2m of soil Unfavorable
conditions include sandy, salty, arid, or acid
soils temperature extremes presence of mice,
mites, moles, and millipedes tillage.
25Soil Microbes
- Decompose OM
- Mineralize and recycle nutrients
- Fix nitrogen
- Detoxify pollutants
- Maintain soil structure
- Able to suppress plant pests
- Parasitize and damage plants
USDA-NRCS Soil Biology Primer
26Soil bacterial colonization of POM (Active C
fraction of SOM)
Microbes are concentrated on/near POM rather
than distributed homogenously in soil Haynes,
2005. Adv. Agron. 85221-267. Important to
maintain actively decomposing organic material in
soils
27Decomposition of plant residue to stable soil
humus
Plants and Animals
Soil Surface
Decomposable Organic Residues
Nutrients
Heterotrophic Biomass
Biologically resistant organics
Microbial products
Soil Humus (50-80 of OM)
28Effect of OM on Physical Properties
- Stabilizes particles together as aggregates, esp.
in sandy and clay soils - Decreases bulk density, providing resistance to
compaction and improved porosity - Improves water infiltration and retention
- Able to retain 20x its weight in water
- Improves friability, allowing for better root
penetration
29Effect of OM on Chemical Properties
- Increases CEC
- Increases nutrient retention
- Forms stable, chelated complexes with Fe3, Mn2,
Zn2, Cu2, and other cations - Effect of OM on Biological Properties
- Provides C source and energy for soil microbes
- Improves microbial population and diversity
- Diverse, active microbial population less likely
to support spread of plant pathogens
30Management of Soil OM
- Proper use of tillage
- Conventionally thought necessary for weed
control, to incorporate OM, and allow root growth - Damages structure, lowers OM content and overall
soil productivity - Decreasing tillage improves soil quality and
fertility - No-till practices may initially decrease yields
and increase fertility needs
31Management of Soil OM
- Proper management of OM is a major factor in
sustainable production - Maintain constant inputs of organic materials to
replace loses from harvest/decomposition - Encourage biodiversity of plant species
Bob Kremer, USDA ARS
32Management of Soil OM
- Use cover crops
- Incorporate crop residues
- Avoid pests/diseases by crop rotation, proper
timing of incorporation, or compost residue away
from field
33Maintenance of vegetative residues through cover
cropping, refuge areas, buffer strips, etc not
only restores organic matter but also provides
habitats for natural insect predators of weed
seeds
Micro-insect larva attacking Amaranthus (i.e.,
pigweed) seed
Osage County, MO
34Management of Soil OM
- Integrate livestock
- Distribution of OM over landscape
- Grazing stimulates root growth and subsequent
release of C into rhizosphere soil - Add animal manures
- Simultaneously add OM and nutrients
- Problems with containing/storing
/transporting/applying large quantities
- Better for small, integrated farms
- Nitrogen losses through ammonification
35Management of Soil OM
- Compost
- Size allows for uniform distribution
- Optimal CN ratio
- Free from weed seeds (if composted correctly)
- Can suppress soil diseases
- Vermicompost- compost produced through action of
worms, esp. good for small farms, gardens - Eisenia foetida (red worm)- known for composting
ability
36Compost
- Temperature
- Most effective bacteria thrive at 70-100F
- 90-140F- rapid decomposition
- gt140F- most weed seeds and pathogens killed
bacterial activity significantly decreased - Aerobic conditions
- Require O2 levels gt5
- Allows for most rapid and effective decomposition
- Regular mixing/turning enhances aeration
- Moisture content of 40-60
- Excess moisture causes nutrient leaching, odor,
slowed decomposition - squeeze test- damp to the touch, with a few
drops of liquid extracted with tightly squeezed
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38CN Ratios- important issue in composting
Material CN Ratio
Vegetable wastes 10-121
Coffee grounds 201
Grass clippings 12-251
Cow manure 201
Horse manure 251
Poultry litter 13-181
Leaves 30-801
Corn stalks 601
Bark 40-1001
Paper 150-2001
Wood chips sawdust 100-5001
- Microorganisms require C for energy and N for
protein - Require N in a CN ratio of 81
- Net N mineralization- CN ratio lt201
- Stable- CN ratio 20-301
- Net N immobilization- CN ratio gt301
- Blending different materials may be necessary to
obtain optimum CN ratio
39Will N be mineralized or immobilized?
- 5000 lbs of wheat straw, 37C and 0.5 N
- Microbes assimilate 35 of C
- Microbes CN ratio is 81
- 5000lbs wheat straw
- X 0.37 (37 C)
- 1850 lbs C in straw
- X 0.35 (35 assimilated)
- 647.5 lbs C assimilated
- 647.5 lbs C 8 81 lbs N
- (x) Lbs N 1 needed
- 0.005 x 5000lbs 25 lbs N in straw
- 81 lbs N needed- 25lbs N in straw 56 lb N
deficit - 56 lbs N immobilized from soil
40Characteristics of a Healthy Soil
- Good soil tilth
- Sufficient depth
- Sufficient, but not excess, supply of nutrients
- Small population of plant pathogens and pests
- Good soil drainage
- Large population of beneficial organisms
- Low weed pressure
- Free of chemicals and toxins that may harm the
crop - Resistant to degradation
- Resilience when unfavorable conditions occur
41Indicators of Soil Health
Indicator Best time to test Healthy Condition
Earthworm presence With moist soil (spring/fall) gt10 worms/ft3 many castings in tilled clods
Color of OM When soil is moist Topsoil distinctly darker than subsoil
Presence of plant residues Anytime Residue on most of soil surface
Conditions of plant roots Late spring or during rapid growth Roots extensively branched, white, extended into subsoil
Degree of subsurface compaction Before tillage or after harvest A stiff wire goes in easily to 2x plow depth
Soil tilth or friability When soil is moist Soil crumbles easily
Signs of erosion After heavy rainfall No gullies, runoff from field clear
Water holding capacity After rainfall during growing season Soil holds moisture at least a week w/o signs of drought stress
Water infiltration After rainfall No ponding or runoff soil surface does not remain excessively wet
pH Same time each year Near neutral and appropriate for crop
Nutrient holding capacity Same time each year N, P, and K increasing or stable, but not into high zone
42Resources
- Organic Soil Fertility
- www.extension.org/article/18565
- NCAT-ATTRA
- Sustainable Soil Management, www.attra.ncat.org/at
tra-pub/soilmgmt.html - Soil Management National Organic Program
Regulations, www.attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/PDF/orga
nic_soil.pdf - Cornell Soil Health
- www.hort.cornell.edu/soilhealth/
- Building Soils for Better Crops, 3rd Edition SARE
- www.sare.org/publications/soils.htm
43Acknowledgements
- This presentation address general organic
production practices. It is to be to use in
planning and conducting organic horticulture
trainings. The presentation is part of project
funded by a Southern SARE PDP titled Building
Organic Agriculture Extension Training Capacity
in the Southeast - Project Collaborators
- Elena Garcia, University of Arkansas CESHeather
Friedrich, University of ArkansasObadiah Njue,
University of Arkansas at Pine BluffJeanine
Davis, North Carolina State UniversityGeoff
Zehnder, Clemson UniversityCharles Mitchell,
Auburn UniversityRufina Ward, Alabama AM
UniversityKen Ward, Alabama AM UniversityKaren
Wynne, Alabama Sustainable Agriculture Network -