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Soil, Agroecosystem and Landscape Health

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Title: Soil, Agroecosystem and Landscape Health


1
Soil, Agroecosystem and Landscape Health
  • Martha E. Rosemeyer
  • April 10, 2003
  • Rachel Corries Birthday

2
Creating a sustainable food system Step 1-
sustainable food production
Earthfriends 1995 The Whole Story of Food
3
Outline
  • Soil health basis for sustainability
  • Agroecosystem health Mimicking the natural
    system
  • Land Institute Designing a new system
  • Slash Mulch System Assessing a traditional mimic
  • Restoration of oak savanna with Highland cattle
  • Substituting domesticated for wild
  • Landscape health connecting the agroecosystems
  • Re-wilding the farm
  • Nature Conservancy Cosumnes River Project, CA

4
John Doran defn of soil quality or soil
health (often used interchangeably)
  • Quality academics vs. health by non-academics
  • The continued capacity for soil to function as a
    vital living system, within ecosystem and
    land-use boundaries to
  • sustain biological productivity
  • promote quality of air and water environments
  • maintain plant animal and human health

Doran and Safley 1997
5
Soil provides ecosystem functions or ecosystem
services
  • Cooperband Infiltration, water retention,
    absorption of nutrients, degradation of
    pesticides, pollutants, stabilizing soil
    temperatures
  • Sequestration of carbon dioxide, decomposition of
    organic substrates
  • Other ecosystem services can be predation of
    insect pests and pollination (not nec. Soil)

6
Indicators of soil quality
  • Physical
  • water infiltration - percolation tests
  • texture and structure
  • Chemical
  • Organic matter
  • pH (the master variable)
  • Biological
  • earthworm population (25/ft3)
  • Zimmer,G. 2000.

7
Soil health associated with organic matter content
  • Organic matter in soil is basically the compost
    that Leslie talked about
  • Organic matter is about all
  • that we can easily change
  • Neutral pH needed for
  • earthworms

8
Human health dependent on
  • Plant and Animal health, which is dependent on
  • Soil Health
  • Mismanagement of soil has lead to poverty,
    malnutrition and economic disaster

9
Soil, plant, human linkageThe case of Selenium
  • Naturally found in soil and water
  • Irrigation of Central Valley in CA ? Se
  • Certain native and other plants accumulate
  • Essential nutrient in animals and humans and can
    be deficiency
  • Cofactor in antioxidant enzymes
  • Important in Vitamin D absorption
  • In large quantities is poisonous to livestock and
    humans causing muscle tremors, etc.
  • Cihacek, Anderson, Barak 1996

10
Soil is totally critical But there is more...
  • Not so linear
  • What sustains plants and animals is not just soil

11
Mimicking the natural system
  • Agroecosystem mimic the native ecosystems
  • Only ecosystems that are present that
  • 1. maintain or build their ecological capital,
  • 2. fix and hold their nutrients,
  • 3. are adapted to periodic stress, such as
    drought and fire, and
  • 4. manage their weed, pest and pathogen
    populations.

12
Tropical Ecosystem mimic Traditional slash
mulch system
  • Pre-Hispanic, swidden (migratory)
  • Bean, corn, root crops also sorghum and rice
  • Key characteristic is mulch of secondary
    vegetation (not primary) that is not burned
  • Fallow part of system
  • System produces 30-40 of Costa Ricas beans
    (1994)
  • Costa Rica beans household use 40, commercial
    60 of production (1994)

13
Experimental site Farm in south Costa Rica
Finca Loma Linda Canas Gordas
14
Slash mulch mimic of rainforest root-litter mat
15
Appropriate second growth vegetation for slash
mulch system
16
After sowing seed, vegetation cut down and
distributed to form a mulch
17
Slash mulch beans
18
Unmulched Slash mulch
  • Volcanic ash soil (Andisol) with high capacity
    for P-fixation

19
The slash mulch system on steep hillsides in
Costa Rica
  • Near Ciudad Neilly
  • Finca Loma Linda, Ca?as Gordas

20
No further management untilharvest and drying of
the bean plants
21
Threshing and winnowing
Winnowing with turkey wing on Guaymi
reservation, near San Vito, Coto Brus, Costa Rica
22
Root systems Slash mulch Unmulched

23

Unfertilized
24
Bean diseases Effects of the mulched and
unmulched systems
  • With Mulch
  • Anthracnose - significantly less
  • (Colletotrichum lindemuthianum)
  • Fusarium-type root rot - significantly less
  • Root knot nematode -significantly less
  • (Meloidogyne spp.)
  • Rhizoctonia-type root rot - significantly
    more

25
Biological impact summary
  • Less foliage and root disease with exception
    Rhizoctonia root rot in mulched system
  • Different nematode communities in mulched and
    unmulched systems, less morphospecies diversity
    in soil of mulched
  • Greater arthropod diversity in soil of mulched
    systems

26
In summary
  • The traditional system appears to be sustainable
    because it imitated the natural system
    root-litter mat
  • limiting nutrient more available
  • avoidance of disease

27
Land Institute
  • Natural Systems Agriculture is a new paradigm
    for food production, where nature is mimicked
    rather than subdued and ignored. Because we are
    located in native prairie, we look to the prairie
    as our model for grain crops. As a result, we are
    investigating the feasibility of perennial
    polycultures or mixtures of perennial grains.

28
Ecosystem function follows structure
  • Have identified four functional groups in
    prairie cool-season grasses, warm-season
    grasses, legumes and composites. Has identified
    perennials in all groups
  • cool-season grasses wild rye, perennial wheat,
  • warm-season grasses bunchgrass (3x higher in
    protein than corn),
  • legumes (Fabaceae) Illinois bundleflower (38
    protein),
  • composite (Asteraceae) Maxmillian sunflower
    (oil)

29
Tall grass prairieperennial and polyculture
Perennial polyculture at the Land
Institute Maxmillian sunflower and Monarch
Butterfly (upper)
30
Polycultures -Land Institute
  • Do perennial polycultures outyield perennial
    monocultures?

31
Perennialization
Marty Bender and Jerry Wild (KSU) looking for
sunflower moths
  • Breed perennial characteristics into existing
    grains like wheat
  • Breed edible grain characteristics into
    perennials
  • Suggests genetic engineering may be a useful
    approach

32
Genetic Engineering what is it?
  • Genetically Engineering (GE) Transfer of genes
    from one organism-- plant, animal or microbe-- to
    another using biotechnology, not conventional
    breeding.
  • Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) is a term
    that is somewhat misleading since the process of
    plant adaptation or conventional breeding can be
    a genetic modification
  • Transgenic

33
GE is not hybridization
  • Hybrids are conventionally bred from two inbred
    parents
  • Advantage is the the F1 generation (the plants
    from the bought seed) is uniform and recessive
    genes are unexpressed
  • Issues are the the seed saved is variable in
    quality so that it is not useful to save
  • Need to continually buy seed
  • Has supplanted open-pollinated varieties

34
Assembling the agroecosystem
  • synthetic communities of plants, animals, and
    micoorganisms that are stable, productive, and
    close enough in form to the native community that
    the essential functions of pest resistance, soil
    stability, and nutrient cycling are preserved.

35
What maintained oak savanna and prairie? --fire
and browsers/grazers
36
Can livestock substitute for natural grazers and
browsers? we meet conservation goals and produce
livestock too?
Scottish Highland cattle foraging on brush and
grass
37
Can we manage the animals so that the rare
herbaceous oak savanna plants are impacted
positively?
38
Farming with the wild
  • Beyond organic
  • We cannot have healthy farms in a degraded
    landscape. Quite apart from the problem of
    drift-- whether chemical or genetic-- there is
    the fact of the biodiversity necessary to produce
    the ecosystem services on which our organic farms
    depend can only be restored and maintained on an
    ecosystem level-- Kirschenmann and Gould

39
  • The idea that organic farms are enclaves of
    purity-- that everything within their boundaries
    is God-like and everything that lies outside
    their boundaries is evil-- is a patch ecology
    perspective that must be reconsidered. --Kirsh.
    and Gould
  • identify ecological neighborhoods
  • how can agriculture fit into them by effectively
    using the ecosystem services they provide
  • microorganisms and soil quality predators of
    insect pests and native pollinators

40
The Nature Conservancy- Cosumnes River Landscape
Level Project
  • 42,000 acres
  • Agencies -
  • State Fish and Wildlife
  • EPA
  • UC Davis
  • Organic rice farmers
  • livestock grazers in
  • buffer areas

41
Egrets and cattails
42
Sandhill cranes in winter rice fields
43
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44
Other Wild Farm pioneers
  • Wildlands corridor Coon Mt. to Split Rock Wildway
    to link Lake Champlain to Adirondacks. Land
    trusts and Black Kettle Farm- maximizes
    biodiversity
  • Chile Parque Pumulin- viable rural economies with
    demonstration organic farms (800,000 acres)
  • Costa Rica- Palo Verde National Park- cattle used
    to clear vegetation
  • Paseo Pantera Mesoamerican corridor

45
Restoration of soil fertility at level of a
country case of Cuba
principally via agronomic methods like contour
plowing etc.
46
Methods to maintain and restore soil fertility in
Cuba
  • 1) Soil Amendments
  • a) Organic matter- leaf-cutting ant refuse, leaf
    litter, compost, green manures, cover crops, worm
    compost (from vermiculture), urban garbage, crop
    residues, processing of agricultural by-products
  • b) Crushed rock and lime
  • c) Physically moving eroded soil and organic
    matter from lowlands to highlands

47
d) Biofertilizers
  • N-fixing organisms
  • symbiotic-Rhizobium (bacteria) Cuba- 80 N
    supplied for legumes
  • free-living-Azotobacter (bacteria) Cuba- 40-50
    of N supplied in non-legumes
  • P-solubilizing-Bacillus (bacteria)
  • VA Mycorrhizal Fungi-
  • Available commercially in Cuba (and US)

48
For sustainable food system- food production
  • We need to restore soil
  • We need to restore connectivity of landscape
  • Work from landscape level perspective for
    sustainable food production and quality of life

49
References
  • Imhoff, D. 2002. Farming with the Wild. In
    Fatal Harvest.
  • Soule, J.D. and J.K. Piper. 1992. Farming in
    Nature's Image. Island Press
  • Jackson, L. and Jackson, D. 2002. The Farm as
    Natural Habitat Island Press

50
  • Cihacek, Anderson, Barak. 1996. Linkages between
    Soil quality and plant, animal and human health.
    In Methods of Assessing Soil Quality. SSSA
    Spec. Pub. 49
  • Zimmer, G. 2000. The Biological Farmer A
    Complete Guide to the Sustainable and Profitable
    System of Farming
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