Title: GEOG 3000 Resource Management SOIL AS A RENEWABLE RESOURCE
1GEOG 3000 Resource ManagementSOIL AS A
RENEWABLE RESOURCE
- M.D. Lee CSU Hayward Winter 2004
2Soil - a (conditionally) renewable resource
"A Nation that destroys its soil destroys
itself." President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Quoted
from a letter sent to US Governors on February
26, 1937.
(Photo source Silsoe College, UK)
3Soil as a renewable resource
- The worlds soils are fragile and valuable
renewable resources that must be actively
conserved while increasingly being exploited - (photo from USDA http//www.statlab.iastate.edu/s
oils/photogal/).
- The soil is the uppermost layer mantling the
earth. - It is the medium in which crops are grown and
through which plants get water and nutrients. - It is a mix of organic material decaying from the
top down, geological (parent) material weathering
from the bottom up, and organic and inorganic
material deposited from above by wind, water or
mass movement.
4Soil fertility
- Although abiotic, the soil is often thought of as
a living entity - a healthy soil is crammed with
millions of microbes and other organisms per
cubic centimeter. - For soils to remain useful, it is important that
they remain fertile, able to provide the
vegetation being grown on them with nutrients. - Fertility is a function of many biotic and
abiotic factors - presence of microrhizomes (N
fixing bacteria), soil texture and structure, NPK
nutrient availability, micronutrient
availability, pH, etc.
5Soil sustainability
- For soils to remain useful, it is also necessary
that they remain stable, i.e. attached to the
land surface, neither removed by wind, water nor
mass movements. - Soil sustainability requires nutrients to remain
available to plants in adequate amounts and for
the rate of soil loss to be balanced by the rate
of soil formation. - Soils are being lost from the land surface all
over the world at rates greater than the rate of
soil formation. - For example, Iowa has lost half the depth of its
topsoil this century and erosion all over the
midwest is so extreme that Louisiana is growing
by 10 sq. mi./yr due to the silt transported by
the Mississippi River to the Gulf of Texas.
6Erosion of soils
- Agricultural soils are over-compacted through
over-grazing and over-use of machinery, leading
to erosive runoff. - Vegetation is completely removed each harvest and
soils left exposed to erosional forces wind,
raindrops, etc. - Soils are used continuously with little fallowing
(rest). - Pesticides that are used to kill crop pests also
sterilize soils, killing useful organisms. - Many soils have been converted into nothing more
than mediums for the delivery of powdered
chemical nutrients which have replaced organic
manure as fertilizer. - Soil structure, microbiology and chemistry have
deteriorated so that a soil often cannot hold on
to chemical fertilizers which then leach away to
groundwater.
7Principal erosion mechanisms
- Erosion can be accomplished by one or more
processes acting in unison that detach and move
particles toward drains, streams or rivers or up
and away into the air. - Rainfall intensity, slope gradient and soil
erodibility (a function of many variables both
micro e.g. particle arrangement and macro e.g.
surface roughness) are major determinants of
erosion potential. - Rain splash - raindrops detach soil particles
from each other and throw them into the air. - Overland flow - running water entrains, pushes or
jumps (saltates) particles downhill. - Wind - turbulent winds pick up small particles or
saltate larger soil particles over the surface.
8Erosion impacts
- Erosion causes a variety of important off-site
(ex-situ) resource impacts in addition to
affecting agricultural or forestry productivity
on-site (in-situ). - The silting up of navigable waterways and water
storage reservoirs affecting transport, carryover
storage, hydroelectric power production, etc. - The destruction of clean water habitats such as
trout streams and offshore coral reefs affecting
fishery productivity and tourism/recreation. - The pollution of drinking water supplies with
suspended sediment and chemicals such as
pesticides and metals carried down attached to
soil particles.
9Soil Conservation Approaches
- Soil conservation can best be achieved through
effective crop management and through the use of
physical structures. - A critical element in most soil erosion controls
is the prevention of the uncontrolled movement of
water across a sloping soil surface. - Similarly, efforts against wind erosion are
designed to reduce wind velocity and surface
shear above a soil surface. - Controls also seek to boost soil cohesiveness and
increase surface friction coefficients, holding
soil particles together to resist movement.
10Predicting Soil Loss
- Soil scientists have had great success with the
RUSLE (see p 147 CRO). - A RKLSCP
- Where A soil loss, R rainfall erosivity, K
erodibility of soil, L length of slope, S
steepness of slope, C cover-type and P
conservation BMP. - R, K, L and S are fixed factors for a farmers
land but C and P can be greatly modified by
changing land management practices. - Look at box 7.2 for the impacts of typical
changes. - The main conservation BMPs that can can be used
to bring down the soil loss for a given field are
taught to farmers through Agricultural Extension
agencies and the USDA Resource Conservation
Service.
11Some key conservation BMPs
- Minimal or no-till farming - doesnt destroy soil
structure or remove residues, drills in seeds
w/out furrows. - Contour farming - plants rows at right angles to
water flow - Strip cropping and crop rotation - pairs mutually
beneficial crops avoids leaving bare soil - Alley cropping/agroforestry - grows trees and
crops together, provides shade, leaf litter,
nitrogen fixing, etc. - Terracing - breaks steep slopes into shallow,
flat steps - Gully control/reclamation - gullies can quickly
swallow up topsoil and must be stopped by walls,
plugs, etc. - Windbreaks/shelterbelts - slow down winds and
wind shear.
12Example BMPCrop Residue Management
- Leaving last year's crop residue on the surface
before and during planting operations provides
cover for the soil at a critical time of the
year. - The residue is left on the surface by reducing
tillage operations and turning the soil less. - Pieces of crop residue shield soil particles from
rain and wind until plants can produce a
protective canopy.
13Example BMPContour Farming
- Crop row ridges built by tilling and/or planting
on the contour create hundreds of small check
dams. - These ridges or dams slow water flow and increase
infiltration which reduces erosion.
14Using soil conservation
- The steeper the slope being farmed and the more
erosive the rainfall, the more important it is
that farmers use physical barriers to erosion
(e.g. terraces, drains and spillways) rather than
more simple surface treatments. - In developing countries, many techniques have
been developed, even for peasant farmers working
on very steep hillsides e.g. Fanya Juu terraces
in Kenya, stone check dams in Burkina Faso,
contour terracing in Central America. - Terracing of slopes for soil stability is an
ancient art going back to the earliest
agricultural civilizations.