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Soil and soil-water relationships. W. Anderson Murfreesboro Master Gardener Feb 20, 2009. From UTK Extension Publications Planning the Vegetable Garden SP291-M Soil Preparation for Vegetable Gardens SP 291-C Care of the Vegetable Garden SP 291-D Organic Vegetable Gardening PB 1391.
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Soil and soil-water relationships W. Anderson Murfreesboro Master Gardener Feb 20, 2009
From UTK Extension Publications Planning the Vegetable Garden SP291-M Soil Preparation for Vegetable Gardens SP 291-C Care of the Vegetable Garden SP 291-D Organic Vegetable Gardening PB 1391
Definitions • Natural medium composed of solids, liquids, and gases that occurs on land surfaces • Supports plant and animal life • Upper limit, lower limit, plant roots • Does not cover all the Earth land surface • It is not tracked in on the house carpet
Soil Components • General rule, a soil is about one-half solids and one-half pores • Water and air fills the pore space • Soil air is lower in O2 and higher in CO2 than surface air • Plant roots • Biological organisms
Soil Components • Solids • Soil texture, relative proportion sands, silts, clays sized materials, separates • Sand 2.0 mm to .05 mm • Silts .05 mm to .002 mm • Clays less than .002 mm • Clay soils, large surface area; small pores • Sandy soils, small surface area, large pores • Clay and Sand differ in ability to provide plants with water, nutrients, aeration and physical support • Sands are drier, less fertile but better aerated & able to support plants
Soil Texture • Twelve textural classes • 3 clay textures, 3 clay loam textures, 3 loam textures • 0 to 100 % sand, silt and clay by weight • Example: Clays, > 35% clay sized particles • Textural class Possible percentage • Clay 20% sand, 20% silt, 60% clay • Clay loam 30% sand, 35% silt, 35% clay • Loam 40% sand, 40% silt, 20% clay
Soil Components • Solids • Aggregate glue sand, silt and clay sized particles together • Granular – glue organic matter and calcium • Destroy soil aggregates – adding sodium • Density- mass per volume-pore space • Texture lbs/cu ft % pore space • Loam 84 49 • Clay loam 79 53 • Clay 74 56
http://soils.usda.gov/education/resources/k_12/lessons/texture/http://soils.usda.gov/education/resources/k_12/lessons/texture/
Soil Water Classification for Water Management Think of a soil as a sponge lift the saturated sponge up does water drip. • Saturation • Gravitational water - drainable • Field Capacity [FC] • Maximum Plant available water • Permanent wilting point [WP] • Plant unavailable water • Air dry • Unavailable water • Oven dry
Volumetric Soil Water Content Ranges Textural class Θv @ FC Θv @ WP Sand .07-.17 .02-.07 Loam .20-.30 .07-.17 Silt loam .22-.36 .09-.21 Clay .32-.40 .20-.24 Available Water = Θv @ FC - Θv @ WP Θv * inches of soil = inches of water in soil
http://www.mt.nrcs.usda.gov/technical/ecs/agronomy/soilmoisture/clay.htmlhttp://www.mt.nrcs.usda.gov/technical/ecs/agronomy/soilmoisture/clay.html • Clay, Clay Loam, and Silty Clay Loam Soils • Appearance of Clay, Clay Loam, and Silty Clay Loam Soils at Various Soil Moisture Conditions • 75 to 100 percent available 0.6 to 0.0 inches per foot depleted • Wet, forms a ball, uneven medium to heavy soil/water coating on fingers, ribbons easily between thumb and forefinger.
Irrigation • Maximize production, vegetable require 1 to 2 ½ inches of water per week • 1 inch of water over 100 square feet = 8.3 cubic feet or 520 lbs water • Less water early in growing season • More when plants are larger and setting fruit • Apply water slowly • Don’t do frequent shallow watering. Why? Shallow root growth you want deep roots
Irrigation (2) • Irrigate early to reduce incident and spread of disease • Cultivate prior to overhead irrigation to increase water infiltration • Trickle irrigation, reduce water use by up to 50 times • Reduces weed growth, weed problems, soil compaction • Expensive
Irrigation (3) • Irrigation system • Back flow preventer must be connected to water source • Screen or disk filter • 10 to 12 psi pressure regulator • Trickle tape • Pressure gauge
Irrigation (4) • Soaker hose – non engineered • Cheap • Not uniform water distribution • Trickle system can be purchased at garden centers for $100 to $200
Time Irrigation Properly • Water late in day – increase diseases • Trickle, drip, furrow – conserve water, avoid foliage diseases • Sprinkler irrigation – best done early morning – apply 1 to 1 ½ inches of water – wait several days before repeating • Less frequent irrigation – less foliage and root diseases
Use Mulches • Reduce some pest pressures but increase others • Reduce moisture stress • Reduce weed pressure
Maintaining or Increasing Soil Organic Matter • Improves structure • Holds water • Increase microbe activity • Stored and releases nutrients • Plants and animals (organic matter) decay to more stable organic matter called humus • Balance between lost and added
Maintaining or Increasing Soil Organic Matter (2) • Sandy soils – less Soil organic matter • Clayey soils – more soil organic matter • More soil mixing – less soil organic matter • Tennessee – warm moist climate – favors decomposition
Using Crop Residues • Residue source of organic matter • Left or composted • If left – may increase insect, disease and weed problems • Turning under – breaks down faster – releases some nutrients • Fewer insect, disease and weed seed survive
Using Lime and Organic Fertilizers • Increase Soil pH • Ground limestone • How much? Soil test • Calcite, dolomite • Basic slag • Wood ashes – don’t dump in one spot
Adding Nutrients - Manure • Manure • N, P, K • Poultry manure highest in N, P, and K • Spread on garden before planting • 250-500 lbs large animal manure per 1000 square feet • 100 to 200 lbs poultry manure per 1000 square feet • Irish potato and sweet potato develop scab and canker if manure is used
Adding Nutrients – non-manure • Fertilizer %N %P2O5 %K2O • Blood meal 8-15 0-3 --- • Bone meal 2-4 12-28 --- • Granite dust --- --- 3.5 • Greensand --- 1-1.5 5-6 • Wood ashes --- 1-2 3-7 • Guano .5-12 4-8 1-3
Questions • What is soil? • Why manage water? How can a soils field capacity be used to manage irrigation? • Why should fertilizer be used? Can fertilizer improve a plants water use efficiency?
Water • Precious resource • Lost water means lost dollars • What is water use efficiency? • Defined as equal to units of crop production from each available unit of water • Example: bushels of grain per inch of water
A long term fertility experiment has been conduct in Illinois. The experiment is called the Morrow Plots. The plots are on the National Historic Registry.
The Morrow Plots to gauge WUE • Plots received only lime, manure, rock phosphate or bone meal from 1904 to 1955 • 1955 a portion of some plot received lime, and commercial fertilizer annually • Fertilized continuous corn used precipitation more efficiently • Better management and improved varieties have also increased crop yield
The Morrow Plots can gauge WUE • Yields of both fertilized and unfertilized corn are increasing. from 1955-1984 Fertilized Not Fertilized 130-150 bu/acre 40-50 bu/acre
The Morrow Plots can gauge WUE • Dry weather and poor fertility can reduce WUE. Proper fertilization that builds high fertility can help the crop overcome drought stress. from 1955-1984 Fertilized Not Fertilized 3.3 bu/inch of water 1bu/inch if water
Question • If plants are fed the proper amounts of N, P2O5 & K2O will these plants: • Produce more dry matter/acre: T or F • Remove more CO2 from atmosphere: T or F • Will decrease the amount of water percolation through the soil and regolith: T or F • Will increase the amount of chemicals percolation through the soil and regolith to the ground water: T or F • Will utilize water less efficiently: T or F
What a soil need to grow: 150 bu/ac of corn • Ingredient pounds per acre supplied • Water 6 to 8 million 30 to 36 inches of rain • Oxygen 10,200 • Carbon 7800 C or carbon in 6 tons of coal • 28,500 CO2 • N 310 675 lbs urea • P 52 115 lbs TSP • K 205 340 lbs KCl • Ca 58 150 lbs ground limestone • S 33 • Mg 50 • Fe 3 • Mn .45 • B .10 • Cu trace • Mo trace
Question • Cost to remove 28,000 CO2/ac from atmosphere? {basis: cost of Nitrogen} • 675 lb Urea * 45 lb N/100 lb Urea =304lb N • 28,000 lb CO2/304 lb N =93 lb CO2/ 1 lb N • 93 lb CO2 /lb N * lb N/ $ 0.30 =310 lb CO2 / $1.00 of N
Typical topsoil – approximate composition • Soil • basisSolids liquids Gases • % by vol 50 25 25 • InorganicOrganic • % by vol 40 10 • % by wt 95 5
INORGANIC Fraction ORGANIC Fraction • (decomposed things) • SandSilt Clay Humus • Primary Secondary Colloids • Minerals Minerals • Quartz layer silicate • Feldspar hydrous oxide • mica
Questions • What are primary minerals? • What are secondary minerals?
Soil - Root System • Rye plant in 1 cu ft of soil for 4 months • Length –miles surface area – sq ft • Roots 385 2550 • Root hairs 6600 4320
Questions • Soil resources in the USA (TN) do not have enough available nonmetals and metals elements for normal growth and development of plants and animals. • TN land area -1980 • Cropland 5.1 million ac • Grassland 5.5 million ac • Woodland 11.7 million ac Now 14 million ac • Urban 1.7 million ac • Other 1 million ac • Federal 1.2 million ac
Non-metal elements human function • N protein • Se antioxidant • P bones & teeth • Metal human function • Cobalt vitamin B12 • Zn sexual maturity • Mn bone formation, Insulin Production • Cu red blood cell formation
Questions • Emphasize • There is a difference between plant available content and total elemental content • Soil testing; plant available content
Other topics • Soil Testing, PB 1061 by Dr. H. Savoy • Liming Acid Soils in Tennessee, PB 1096 by Dr H. Savoy
Additional topics • Landscape Irrigation by Dr. J Buchanan, CD in the extension office • Commercial WEB sites • RainBird Irrigation at www.rainbird now look under landscape irrigation • Toro Irrigation at www.toro.com/sprinklers/index.html • Hunter Industries at www.hunterindustries.com • Book Source: Simplified Irrigation Design ISBM 0-471-28622-22