Title: A Healthy Soil A Biologically Active Soil
1A Healthy Soil A Biologically Active Soil
- Fran Walley
- Department of Soil Science
- U of S
2What is Soil?
- Highly complex mixture of geological materials,
dead organic matter, living roots, animals and
microbes, soil water, and soil atmosphere - Soil provides the physical and chemical
conditions necessary for plant life, thus animal
and microbial life - Kimmons, 1997
3A dynamic system
4A dynamic system
CO2
CO2
NO3
SO4
Bacteria
P2O4
Microbes
SO4
NO3
Fungi
NH4
5Soil and Sustainability
- Sustainability is the use of resources, human,
natural and man-made, in ways that allow current
generations to satisfy their needs without
jeopardising the capacity of future generations
to meet theirs (OECD, 2001)
6What is Soil Health?
- Depends on your view of soil function
- Supports plant growth
- Seed germination and root growth
- Nutrient and water supply
7Soil Functions
- Regulates and partitions water flow
- Receives, stores and releases moisture
by permission Saskatchewan Interactive
http//interactive.usask.ca/ski/index.html
8Environmental Buffer Phytoremediation
University of Saskatchewan Phytoremediation Team
(19 Aug 2003)
9Additional Functions?
Sequesters Carbon (CO2)
10Organic Matter is the Key to Soil Health!
- OM is a substrate (C and energy source) for
microbes - Reserve of N, S, P
- Retains C from the atmosphere
- Retains nutrients by providing cation- and
anion-exchange capacities
11- Organic matter an effective soil glue and
promotes aggregation - Resists erosion
- Reduces crusting
- Maintains soil in an uncompacted condition with
lower bulk density - Improves porosity which facilitates air and
water movement in soil
12- Reduces negative environmental effects of
herbicides and other pesticides - Can tie-up various heavy metals
- Supports microbial degraders
13Effects of Cultivation on SOM
- Loss of organic matter
- Reduced by 15 to 30 since cultivation
- On eroded soils, losses up to 90
- Most loss occurs within 10 years of cultivation
14Effects of Cultivation on SOM
Reduced yields
Increased decomposition
15Soil Structural Damage
- aggregate breakdown
- changes in pore space and size
- affects air and water movement
- affects infiltration rate, runoff, erosion
16Solberg/Cochran et al. 2003 http//www.sidney.ars
.usda.gov/
17Cultivation and Soil Erosion
18Cultivation and Salinization
- Changes in hydrologic cycle (clearing trees,
summerfallow) - More water moving through the soils, carrying
dissolved salts and nutrients into depressions
and groundwater - Leaky system
191991 census data 41 of cultivated land in SK
at risk of increasing salinization
Saskatchewan Interactive http//interactive.usask.
ca/ski/index.html
20Important observation..these soil properties
(i.e., properties sensitive to management) can be
useful indicators of soil quality
21What are some key indicators of soil quality?
- Visual
- Physical
- Chemical
- Biological
22Visual
- Aerial photographs
- subsoil exposure, gully formation, salinization,
etc. - provides evidence of changes that might threaten
soil quality - Pictures dont lie but an inaccurate
interpretation might
23Physical Indicators
- Soil texture
- Topsoil depth
- Bulk density, compaction
- Porosity, aggregate stability
24Chemical Indicators
- Organic matter
- pH, salinity
- Cation exchange capacity
- Nutrient levels
- Nutrient supply potential (nutrient cycling)
e.g., Amino sugar N - Levels of contaminants
25Biological Indicators
- Micro- and macro-organisms
- Activity (respiration)
- Biomass
- Related by-products (including glomalin,
ergosterol) and enzymes
26Which Indicators Should Be Used?
- No single property tells the entire tale
- The challenge is to identify a suite of
indicators that are sensitive enough to detect a
meaningful change in soil quality - Time-frame typically 1- to 10-yrs (i.e., changes
occur and managers can react) - Depends on land use, goals
27Good Indicators..
- Easy to measure
- Sensitive to changes in management, etc.
- Assessed using inexpensive and user-friendly
measurements - Relatively rapid measurements available
28Nutrient Availability Often Equated with Soil
Health
- Common soil tests provide estimates of nutrient
availability - Changes in nutrient status may be related to the
size and activity of the SOM - Highly dynamic nutrient pools (i.e., soil N) may
be misleading because soil test is only a
snapshot
29Dead Org. N
Active
Stabilized
Old
Nitrification
Mineralization
30N mineralization depends on the activity of soil
microbes...
....and the size of the organic N pool
31Conventional Till
No Till
Stabilized
Old
(Liang et al. 2004)
32Summary
- Soil quality is in the eye of the beholder
- Any measure of soil quality should tell us
something about a desired function (something we
value) - Useful soil quality measures are responsive to
management changes - Soil quality better described by a suite of
measures than a single measure
33Thank you