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Soil Remediation Workshop. By Josh Singer & Bahiyyah Parks. Class Outline. 1. Urban Soil Problems 2. Soil Testing 3. Soil Remediation 4. Vermicompost. Urban Soils. Urban Soil issues. Lack of an Organic top Layer Lacking nutrient cycling Nutrient Deficiencies
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Soil Remediation Workshop By Josh Singer & Bahiyyah Parks
Class Outline 1. Urban Soil Problems 2. Soil Testing 3. Soil Remediation 4. Vermicompost
Urban Soil issues • Lack of an Organic top Layer • Lacking nutrient cycling • Nutrient Deficiencies • Leeching, poor construction practices • Soil Compaction • Prevents water, oxygen, and nutrients from reaching the roots • Soil Contamination • Lead, Arsenic
Why Soil Test? • Majority of tree problems are a direct result of soil. • Plants need a balance of nutrients, pH, and organic matter in soil. • If there’s not enough or too much nutrients, too high or too low pH, and too little organic matter plants will have difficulty growing.
Step 1: Sanitize Tools Tools • Use either a shovel, soil probe, auger, or trowel to dig the holes. • Do not use brass, bronze, or galvanized tools because they will contaminate samples with copper and/or zinc. • The soil will need to be mixed in a plastic bucket, that hasn’t been used to store fertilizers or other chemicals. • Clean your equipment with water before the test.
Step 2: Identify Unique Areas • Soil tests should sample each unique area, or individual soil type, separately as a different test. • The physical appearance, texture, color, sunlight, slope, drainage and past fertilization history should be similar throughout the unique area.
Step 3: Digging the Samples • For each unique area take at least six to twelve samples (approximately 15 ft. apart) • Remove all mulch, grass, rocks • Dig a V-shaped hole, 6-8 inches deep and a shovel’s head wide. • Scrape the side of the hole straight down to collect a vertical dirt sample about a half inch wide and containing dirt from all the levels. • When using a soil probe or auger, make sure to go down 6-8 inches for each sample. • Place the samples in a bucket.
Step 4: Prepare the Sample • Mix all samples • Scoop out around one cup of soil and spread it on a piece of paper to dry. • When the sample is dry, fill either a pre-ordered sample box or a clean plastic bag, about two-thirds full. • Label the outside of the bag clearly with a sharpie with the customer’s name, address, and the name of the unique area.
Step 5: Mail Sample Mail the sample(s) to either A & L Eastern Laboratories, Inc. (http://www.aleastern.com/index.html) Will test for Lead and Mercury More expensive or University of Mass Amherst (http://www.umass.edu/soiltest/order.htm) Just tests for lead Less Expensive Make sure to fill out the order form, downloaded from their websites, and include the order forms with the mailed samples.
Step 6: Reading Test Results • Most soil tests will tell you if certain nutrients are low or high, if pH levels are low or high, or if there are containments. • Focus on recommendations. • If you are not sure about certain recommendations, Google it for alternatives.
Good Soil Structure • Higher Organic Matter • BalancedNutrient Levels • Higher biological activity • Large root systems • Minimal Tillage • Little compaction • Low salt fertilizers • Surface mulching • cover crop/ green manures
Higher Organic Matter Holds moisture Adds bulk Feeds Earthworms and Microbes Adds small amounts of Humus Sources: Crop residues, Old Roots, Compost, Vermicompost,Manure,Cover crops, Mulch
Humus • Calculated as part of OM in soil tests • Increases soil’s CEC • Holds 30—70% of soil’s Nutrient holding capacity • Acts as sponge to hold water for roots • Improves soil’s structure
Balanced Nutrient Levels • Add minerals to your soil! • Balance Soluble Nutrientsto Slow Release Nutrients • Nutrients in short supply= Limiting factor • Do not add too much Nitrogen Amendments to use: Rock powders, mined fertilizers, manure, kelp, humates, fish, Sea-90
10 Important Soil Nutrients • phosphorous • calcium • potassium • magnesium • Sulfur • zinc • manganese • iron • copper • boron
Higher Biological activity • Soil Food Web consists of bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, microarthropods, worms and beetles • Improves soil structure • Moderates water levels • Provides nutrients to plant’s roots • Protects plants from pathogens and pest attacks
Mycorrhiza • A Symbiotic relationship between fungus and roots. • Roots give Mycorrihizae (plural) food and a place to stay and in return Mycorrihizae increases the root’s ability to absorb water and nutrients. • Mycorrihizae are mostly found in natural habitats such as a forest.
Earthworms remediation • Earthworms • Decompact soil • Process organic matter into plant accessible nutrients (high in NPK) • Balance acidity • Have been known to reduce containments • Applying worms • Place worms in a small hole • Cover Surface area with a soft organic matter mulch/compost to feed worms. Worms will only stay if there is organic matter to eat. • water
Minimal Tillage • Tilling decreases organic matter in soil • Tilling disrupts soil fungi and bacteria’s homes • Tilling increases weeds! • Reduces soil porosity and structure (long term)
Low Salt Fertilizers • Most chemical fertilizers are high in salts • Harm soil life • Injure plants • Nutrients are often too soluble
Surface Mulching • Feeds and protects soil life • Mimics Nature • Decreases need for watering • Hinders weeds
Mulching • Benefits • Increases organic matter • Suppresses weeds • Winter protection • Holds moisture • Prevents soil crusting • Can encourage beneficial fungus and bacteria (i.e.. Mycorrhiza) • Suppresses turf competition • Remulch every season • Keep mulch 2-3 inches thick and 2-3 inches away from trunk. Make sure you can see the root flare. • Avoid volcano mulching A little goes a long way
Sheet mulching • Newspaper/cardboard (breaks down) • Landscaping Fabric (may harm soil)
Living Mulch • Companion plants • Must manage competition
Cover Crops • Adds Organic Matter and Mulch to soil, if left • Roots can help aerate soil, break up compacted soils, feed microbes • Can add Nutrients to soil • Prevents erosion • Can out-compete weeds • Can attract beneficial insects
Companion Plants Green Manures: • Plants that are cut back and plowed before they can seed to add nutrients to the soil • Comfrey, Alfalfa, bayberry
Companion Plants Soil Decompacters: • Plants with strong deep roots that help to beak up compacted soil to gather deep nutrients. • dandelion, daikon radishes, carrots
Companion Plants Nitrogen Fixers: • Plants to extract nitrogen from the air and transfer it into soils • cow peas, peanuts, white clover • May need to inoculate .
Tree Guild A sustainable ecosystem based on a woodland habitat Soil creating components • Nutrient cycling – nature’s recycling system a continuous flow of organic matter (leaves, stems, etc) into the production of living matter. • Mineralization – when organic matter decomposes into plant accessible forms • Humus– fully decomposed organic matter
Remediating Contaminents ***Always do a soil test to see how the soil is contaminated.*** • Replacement • Completely replace the soil, very expensive • Amendment • Amend the soil as much as possible lowering the percentage of containments • Bacteria in compost has been successful in breaking down certain containments. • Bio remediation • Use plants to soak up the containments • Sunflowers – lead, arsenic, zinc, uranium • Spider Plants – arsenic • Hydrangeas – aluminum • Water Hyssop – mercury • Red Mulberry - (PCB) - Polychlorinated biphenyl ***Dispose of plant waste properly, don’t compost*** • Earth worms • There’s growing evidence that earthworms can bio remediate toxins such as PCBs and lead • Mycoremediation • Use fungi to remediate toxins such as mercury, PCB,s and dioxins • Paul Stamets – lead researcher – www.fungi.com
Why Vermiculture Vermicluture is the practice of creating compost by feeding organic matter to worms. • Advantages • Can be done inside • No heat • Worms reproduce, increasing the speed of composting and possibility of more bins • Disadvantages • Worms take more care • Limited to the number of worms in the bin • Avoid Citrus
Components of a Worm Bin • A bin with several 1/8 inch holes, and a lid • 6-8 inches of Wet bedding • Ripped up newspaper • Pet moss • Straw • Add starting soil • Worms • Make sure the worms are Red Wigglers, Eisenia foetida
Feeding Your Worms • Feed your worms almost anything that you would normally compost (Avoid lots of citrus and onions) • If possible bury food scraps in the top layer of the bedding, especially large pieces. • Don’t use more food scraps than the worms can eat in a week. (add more food after the worms have eaten 2/3 of previous food scraps) Bokashi Options
Construction Instructions • Dill 1/8 inch holes in your bin every couple of inches starting 4inches off the ground. • Drill several holes on the bottom for drainage • Create the bedding by ripping newspaper into long thin strips on the bottom of the bin. Fill the bin up 6-8 inches. • Add starter soil • Wet the bedding.
Harvesting a Worm Bin • Easiest way to harvest a vermiculture bin is to push the finished compost all to one side • Add fresh bedding, water, a little compost, and food to the empty space. • In a 1-2 weeks all the worms will move towards the new area and you can safely harvest the old compost.
Trouble Shooting Fruit Flies - cover food with soil - add less food - chop up food Bad Smells - empty water faster - cover food with soil Mold - too much citrus - empty water faster Worms crawling out of bin - conditions are not right
Citizen Composter What is a Citizen Composter? • An awesome citizen who is actively composting to produce compost and/or worms to amend urban soils supporting trees, to increase the survival rate of urban trees. • Each Citizen composter will receive a map of tree boxes to amend, assistance creating a vermiculture bin, and ongoing technical assistance.
Further Questions • Contact Josh Singer and Bahiyyah Parks • jsinger@caseytrees.org • bahiyyah@yahoo.com • To get involved contact • wangarigardens@gmail.com • Resources • http://www.youtube.com/user/growingyourgreens • gardenweb.com • rockdustlocal.com • bionutrient.org • gardeningwithmicrobes.com • trustnature.com.au • www.boogiebrew.net