Soil, it’s alive! hayes and munroe

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Transcript of Soil, it’s alive! hayes and munroe

Soil, It’s Alive!

Adam Hayes, Soil Management Specialist Jake Munroe, Soil Fertility Specialist

OMAFRA

Eastern Ontario Crop Conference February 18, 2016

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Outline

• Types of soil life • Abundance of soil life • Functions of soil life • Measuring soil life • Soil management • Principles of soil health

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Soil organisms

Soil life represents <0.5% of total soil volume

However, it drives the functions we ask of our soils

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Types of Soil Life

• Microflora – Bacteria, fungi, algae

• Microfauna – Protozoa, nematodes

• Mesofauna – Mites, springtails, etc.

• Macrofauna – Earthworms, beetles, etc.

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Macrofauna

Microfauna

Microflora

Mesofauna

The Really, Really Little Guys Microflora

• Microscopic • Includes bacteria, fungi, green algae • Gain energy from wide variety of material

– Residue/simple sugars, plants, chemical compounds

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The Really Little Guys Microfauna

• Less than 0.2 millimetre body width • Mainly nematodes and protozoa • Live in water-filled pore spaces

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The Little Guys Mesofauna

• 0.2-2 millimetre body width • Includes mites, springtails, and others • Live in air-filled pores and residue

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The Big Guys Macrofauna

• Greater than 2 millimetre body width • Includes earthworms, beetles, and termites • Able to dig through soil

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What About Numbers?

Type Abundance

Bacteria 100 million - 1 billion / teaspoon

Fungi 1,000 - 15,000 lbs/acre

Protozoa 1,000 – 1,000,000 / teaspoon

Springtails 40,000 / square meter

Earthworms 150,000 / acre or up to 1,000 lbs/acre

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What About Numbers?

Type Abundance

Bacteria 100 million - 1 billion / teaspoon

Fungi 1,000 - 15,000 lbs/acre

Protozoa 1,000 – 1,000,000 / teaspoon

Springtails 40,000 / square meter

Earthworms 150,000 / acre or up to 1,000 lbs/acre

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What About Numbers?

Type Abundance

Bacteria 100 million - 1 billion / teaspoon

Fungi 1,000 - 15,000 lbs/acre

Protozoa 1,000 – 1,000,000 / teaspoon

Springtails 40,000 / square meter

Earthworms 150,000 / acre or up to 1,000 lbs/acre

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What About Numbers?

There are more microorganisms in a single teaspoon of healthy soil than

there are people on earth.

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What About Numbers?

In just the top 6 inches, all the organisms in an average soil weigh somewhere between

2,500 and 5,000 lbs/acre

No wonder some experts refer to soil life as an “underground herd”

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Topsoil represents area of greatest abundance and

diversity of soil life

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And Diversity?

Soil is one of the most diverse ecosystem on the planet.

• 1 gram of soil: thousands of species of bacteria • Up to 3,000 species of fungi exist in soil • Multiple species of earthworms in every acre

Diversity redundancy resilience

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Functions of Soil

22 Slide courtesy of Odette Menard

Functions of Soil Life

• Soil organisms perform many key functions of healthy soil, including: 1) Nutrient cycling 2) Maintaining soil structure 3) Symbiotic nutrient exchange 4) Disease suppression

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Nutrient Cycling

• Transformation from organic to inorganic forms

• Larger organisms tear up residue, smaller organisms decompose it

• Protozoa and nematodes: – Mineralize N – excrete

hundreds of lbs of NH4

+/acre/day

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bacteria

protozoa

Nutrient Cycling

• Actinomycetes – Give soil earthy smell – Important for hard-to-

decompose materials

• Earthworms – Night-crawlers pull

surface litter into permanent burrow

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Nutrient Cycling

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Soil Structure

• Glomalin is a waxy coating created by mycorrhizal fungi

• It helps aggregates form (acts like chewing gum) and protects them

• Very tough – good protector of

soil aggregates

• Lots in the soil! – 6,000-15,000 lbs/acre in top 6 inches

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CT, SW-F NT, SW-WW-SF Moderately-grazed pasture

WSA = 14% Total glomalin = 2.4 mg/g

WSA = 47% Total glomalin = 3.2 mg/g

WSA = 93% Total glomalin = 7.9 mg/g

Soil Structure

Adapted from: “The Role of Soil Biology in Improving Soil Quality”, Dr. Kristine Nichols

Dry

Wet

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Symbiotic Nutrient Exchange

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Disease Suppression

• In a healthy soil, populations of organisms are balanced

• Disease reduced by competition with pathogens, release of toxic compounds, and predator-prey relationships

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Measuring Soil Life

• Researchers – DNA – Nematode populations – Decomposition rate – Particulate organic matter – Microbial respiration rate – Bait lamina

• Commercial labs – Solvita – Organic matter, nematodes,

other

Field Measurements

• Cornell Soil Health Assessment – Organic matter – Active carbon – Soil Respiration – Soil Protein – Potentially mineralizable nitrogen (PMN)

• Haney – Total N, inorganic N, phosphate, Solvita C02-C, water

extractable organic C, water extractable organic N

Ontario Research

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• Over the long-term, no-till and more complex rotations resulted in higher soil health scores

• Three factors showed the greatest differences between tillage systems and crop rotations: 1) Aggregate stability 2) Percent soil organic matter 3) Potentially mineralizable nitrogen

Trapping Beetles

• Beneficial insect • Feed on slugs • Measure by trapping

Ground Beetles

Management Impacts on Soil Life

• Slugs can take up seed treatment which can have a negative impact when ground beetles feed on them

• Slugs will feed on weeds or rye before corn or soybeans

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Counting Earthworm Middens

Want to see 10 to 15 middens per square metre

Dig up a shovelful of soil

Soil Life

01020304050607080

Earthworms/m2

ConvChiselNo-till

Organic Matter Level %

Biological Activity

% 1 60

2 70

3 85

4 100

Complex Crop Rotations Improve Soil Life

• In general, more diverse rotations result in more diverse soil life

• A greater proportion of time with live roots in the soil means enhanced soil life and activity: – Corn-soybean rotation: 38% (~9/24 months with

live roots) – Corn-soybean-wheat: 53% (~19/36 months) – Corn-soybean-wheat (red clover): 61% (~22/36

months)

Potentially Mineralizable Nitrogen

40

0

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Corn-Soy Corn-Soy-Wheat

PMN

(mg/

kg/d

ay)

0-15 cm soil depth, after 14 years on clay loam soil (Ridgetown)

Cover Crops Improve Soil Life

The Cotton Test

• Bury men's cotton briefs for 60 days (wash new ones first)

• Leave the waistband showing so they can be easily found

• Dig up to see how much has been eaten

Can You Determine the Rotation & Tillage?

Tillage • Conv. till • No-till

Rotation • Cont. corn (C) • Cont. soys (S) • Corn-soys • Soys-Wheat (W) • C-S-W (RC)

Can You Determine the Rotation & Tillage?

Tillage • Conv. till • No-till

Rotation • Cont. corn (C) • Cont. soys (S) • Corn-soys • Soys-Wheat (W) • C-S-W (RC)

Can You Determine the Rotation & Tillage?

A B C D Middens/m2 0 50 1 35 # of Worms/m2 41 317 55 161 Wt. in grams 8.6 77.9 13.6 40 % Mature 24.4 21.6 24.8 16.9 Solvita 2.6 3.4 2.9 3.0 PMN 17 53 38 31 Organic matter 47 64 77 56 Aggregate Stability

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Soybean Yield 56 67 66.5 63

1. Cont. Corn, 2. Cont. Soys, 3. C-S, 4. S-Wheat, 5. C-S-W (R.Clover) 1. Conventional tillage, 2. No-till

Can You Determine the Rotation & Tillage?

Cont. Soys CT

C-S-W(RC ) NT

S-W CT C-S NT

Middens/m2 0 50 1 35 # of Worms/m2 41 317 55 161 Wt. in grams 8.6 77.9 13.6 40 % Mature 24.4 21.6 24.8 16.9 Solvita 2.6 3.4 2.9 3.0 PMN 17 53 38 31 Organic matter 47 64 77 56 Aggregate Stability

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Soybean Yield 56 67 66.5 63

Putting It All Together

• Manage with the “underground herd” in mind • Diverse crop rotation + organic amendments =

diverse foods • Continuous cover = consistent food source • Stable aggregates = habitat

Soil life drives soil function. Put your soil life to work to increase productivity and resilience of your soils.

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Questions?

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