Title: Organic Matter
1Organic Matter
2Black Gold
3After completing this chapter, you should be able
to
- Explain what organic matter is and how it forms
- Describe what organic matter does in the soil
- List several ways to maintain soil organic matter
- Discuss the problem of nitrogen tie-up
- Define organic soil, listing uses and problems
4- Organic matter consists of
- Animal and plant remains
- Roots, stems, etc.
- Leaves, grass clippings, compost, wood chips,
mulch, etc.
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6Chemical Makeupof O.M.
- Complex carbon compound chains
- Other elements attach such as
- N, O, H, S
- Carbohydrates are chains of simple sugars
- Sugars are short C chains with O
- Starches are a type of carbohydrate
7O.M.
- Many plant parts are made of cellulose, others
carbohydrates - Cellulose forms long fibers
- Most plant tissue is starch and cellulose
- Lignins are 10- 30 of plant tissue
- Lignins make the plant rigid
8Lignin
9O.M.
- Lignins are glued together cellulose fibers
- Lignins resist decay
- Lignins account for soil humus
- Proteins are chains of amino acids
- Short carbon chains of N and often S
10Decomposition of O.M.
- Carbon chains are broken down by soil flora into
shorted chains, simpler compounds - Decay resistant compounds are called humus
- Organic matter O2--gtCO2H2O humus
11Decomposition of O.M.
- Humus O2?CO2 H2O
- First reaction is fast, second one is slower
- Well drained soils lose 1-3 per year
12Humus
- Five factors effect the amount of O.M.
- Vegetation.
- Climate.
- Soil texture.
- Drainage.
- Tillage.
13Humus
14PrairiesGenerate the Most O.M.
- Humid tall grass prairie 5.8-7.6T/A/Yr
- N.Dakota mixed prairie1.4 T shoots
- 4T of roots
15ForestsHave the Least Soil O.M.
- The O.M. stays on the soil surface as leaf litter
- And in the canopy and tree stand
- There is 2x O.M. in prairie as forest
- O.M. extends deeper into the prairie
- Prairie O.M. returns to soil each year
- Forest O.M. does not
16Soil Profiles of Prairie and Forest Compared
O
A
A
AB
E
Bw
Bt
C
17Conditions for O.M.
- Arid soils have less O.M.
- May gain O.M. with irrigation
- More Rain more O.M.
- Higher temp more O.M. but decays faster
- Cooler temp more O.M. (below 770F)
18O.M.
- Fine textured soils have more O.M.
- Wetter soils have more O.M. (less 02)
- O.M. improves conditions of mineral soils
- Increases water holding capacity
- Improves texture
- Stores nutrients in colloids and own chemicals
19Nutrient Availability
- Humus stores nutrients and makes some nutrients
more available - Releases mild organic acids which dissolve soil
minerals - Breaks down P compounds
- Chelates Fe and Z
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21Soil Aggregation
- O.M. causes soil particles to clump
- Improves soil texture
- Improves resistance to break down
- Easier to work
- Better aerated
- Absorbs water
22Soil Aggregation
23Undesirable Effects of OgtMgt
- Nitrogen tie up
- Some plant residues are toxic
- Exampledead quack grass roots
24Maintaining Soil O.M.
- Maintain a higher input than loss
- O.M. naturally becomes C02?to the air
- O.M. produces a gum that glues soil particles
together
25Conservation Tillage
- Moldboard tillage causes influx of O.M. and
oxygen into the soil causing rapid decay. Bare
soil is left to erosion - Conservation tillage (no till) reduces oxygen,
leaves material on surface for erosion control - Holds more moisture, regulates temp
26Crop Residues
- Leaving crop residues provides O.M.
- Well fertilized crops leave more O.M.
- Green manure crops are plowed down instead of
harvested - You have to weigh the crop loss against the gains
27Crop Residues
28Crop Residues
- Leaving crop residues increase O.M.
- Exception is root crops
- Nationally about 1/3 of crop residue is used for
food and bedding - Fertilizing can increase crop residue
29Green Manuring andCover Cropping
- Traditional is main crop plowed down
- The loss of a paying crop for one season doesnt
justify - Legumes such as clover, alfalfa
- Grasses such as oats or rye
- Winter rye,fall planted spring plowed
- Companion crop between rows
30Crop Rotation
- Sometimes avoided because less valuable crops
sometimes planted - Improves soil O.M.
- Continuous crop reduces O.M.
- Grains cause smaller loss
- Meadow and hay increase O.M.
31Organic Matter Additions
- Manures
- Organic waste
- Sewage sludge
- Compost, leaves, grass clippings
- Crop only farms dont have manure
- Decayed sawdust or chips can be used
32Mulches
- Straw, clippings, leaves
- Reduces annual weeds
- Retains moisture
- Moderates soil temperature
- Not worth it on crops such as corn
- Increases yields on high value crops such as blue
berries, raspberries, strawberries, tree fruits
33Maximum Cropping
- Cover soil as much as possible with crop
- Can double crop
- Can have two crops in a season
- Avoid fallowing
34Nitrogen Tie-up
- Soil flora need C and N to grow
- Flora will compete with plants for N
- Crop will show lack of N
- This is called carbon nitrogen ratio
- CN ratiowell rotted manure is 201
- Low CN ratio is nitrogen rich
- High CN ratio is N poor
35CN ratios
- Material CN ratio
- Soil humus 10
- Garden soil 12-15
- Compost 15-20
- Rotted manure 20
- Straw, leave 60
- Sawdust 400
36Nitrogen Tie-up
Net gain Of nitrogen
Amount nitrogen
of organisms
Nitrogen Depression period
time
37Nitrogen Tie-up
- Occurs when low N materials are turned into the
soil - Rapid decay ties up usable N
- Surface material decay slowly
- Only N depletion at interface
- Plant crops after N depression or
- Add enough fertilizer to satisfy both
38Composting
- During composting the CN ratio narrows to about
151 - At this point it can be added to the soil
- Dont use table scraps that attract animals such
as rats. - I was ordered by the city to remove my compost
pile because of rats/mice) when I spread it there
were no signs of critters
39Home compost pile
Organic material
- Enclosure
- Made of
- Fencing
- Or wire
Fertilizer Lime soil
Organic material (crop residue)
Organic material (grass clippings)
Organic material (manure)
Organic material ( leaves)
4ft to 10 ft in diameter
40Organic Soils
- Soils containing 20-30 O.M. are organic soils
- 1 out of 200 acres of American soil are organic
- Al,Mn,Mi,Fl,and Wi have the most acres of organic
soil - Organic soils form in bogs, marshes and swamps
41Organic Soils
42Organic Soils
- Wetlands often completely fill with organic
deposits - Some organic deposits can reach 80
- Peat Slightly decayed
- Muck fully decayed material
- Brown water from peat, muddy water from muck
43Organic Soils
- Fibricslightly decayed
- Hemic moderate decay
- Sapric most decayed
- Sphagnum peat is from sphagnum moss
- Hypnum peat is from hypnum moss
- Hypnum contains more lime/less acid
44Organic Soils
- Reed-sedge peat
- Forms in reed-sedge bogs
- Less acid
- More decomposed
45Organic soil profile
Oi
46Organic Soils
- Lightest organic soil can weigh 1/20 as much as
mineral soil - Heaviest weighs about 1/3 that of mineral soils
47Organic Soils
- Sphagnum can absorb 20x its own weight
- Reed-sedge 5x its own weight
- Cultivated muck 2x
- Most organic soils are low in nutrients
- Muck soil N rich but low in P K
- Once fertilized retain nutrients
48Organic Soils
- Good for growing onions, celery, lettuce,
carrots, mint, hay, turf - Warms season crops dont do well
- About 700,000 acres yield 1billion/yr
- Once cleared, starts to disappear
- Called subsidence in Fl2-2 ½/yr
49Organic Soils
- Design drainage system to keep high water table
- Install sprinkler system
- Use wind erosion techniques but not tall
windbreaks
50Organic SoilsUses for Peat
- Irish use for fuel(brewed alcohol often has smoky
flavor) - Used in soils mixes in nurseries and greenhouses
- Good for acid loving plants
- Hypnum is better for low acid plants
- Reed-sedge,for soil conditioning