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Organic Soil Management. The purpose of soil management is to nourish soil organisms so they can build soil structure and cycle nutrients. Soil Components. Mineral component. Sand – largest O 20-40x Silt – medium o 25x Clay – smallest . 1
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Organic Soil Management The purpose of soil management is to nourish soil organisms so they can build soil structure and cycle nutrients.
Mineral component • Sand – largest O 20-40x • Silt – medium o 25x • Clay – smallest . 1 • Pore space varies with size of particles
pH • pH is the measure of the concentration of hydrogen ions. • It is measure on a logarithmic scale going from 1-14 with 1 being the most acidic (most hydrogen ions) and 14 the most basic (least hydrogen ions). • pH of soil is important because certain chemical reactions only occur in certain range. • Not as important for organic systems, because they depend on biological reactions, not chemical reactions.
Soil Ecosystem • Biological model of soil management as opposed to the chemical model is the major key to good soil management. • More individual life forms in soil than live on the surface of the earth. • 4 billion bacteria, 1 million fungi per teaspoon of soil • Perform many functions to support plant life
Biodiversity • Soil fertility is related to having a large number of different types of life forms. • Different crops depend on different ecosystems. • Annual field crops – bacteria dominated • Woody perennials – fungi dominated
How the soil food web benefits plant life • Builds soil structure • Disease suppression • Improves nitrogen retention • Mineralizes nutrients • Produces plant growth hormones • Improves crop quality
Factors to be managed • Soil air Greatest • Soil water • Soil organic matter • Soil minerals Least Plant response
Soil air management • Most important because beneficial soil organisms need oxygen to live. • Anaerobic organisms produce plant toxins and bad smells. • Plants also need oxygen in the soil for nutrient uptake and for growth of the roots.
Soil air management • Most important because beneficial soil organisms need oxygen to live. • Anaerobic organisms produce plant toxins and bad smells. • Plants also need oxygen in the soil for nutrient uptake and for growth of the roots.
Soil Water Management • All living organisms need water to survive. • Too much or too little water can kill.
Managing soil water • Primary technique is tillage – to create pore space • Optimum soil water content is 20-30% but it will fluctuate with rain and/or irrigation • Monitor soil moisture with moisture meter or visual examination • Different areas will have different moisture levels
Soil organic matter • Made up of living and dead residues in different stages of decomposition (living, dead and long dead) • Food source for the decomposers who feed on dead organisms and waste products
Conserving soil organic matter • Avoid excess tillage • Retain crop residue • Cover crops
Managing soil organic matter • Two ways: • Conserve existing organic matter • Adding organic matter to soil
Adding organic matter to soil • Raw manure • Organic standards considerations • 120 days for root crops • 90 days for other crops • Compost • Requires a large amount • Must have source of materials to compost • Must be gathered
Soil mineral management • Least effect on crop production • Good management leads to better plant health, higher nutritional quality, increasedflavor and shelf life • Especially important in SE US because soils have been depleted – long warm season with abundant rain – higher rates of reactions in the soil, rapidly leached out of soil N P K S Ca Mg Fe Cu
Managing soil minerals • Primary technique is a soil test • Analysis of test • How to Convert an Inorganic • Fertility Recommendation to an Organic One