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Soil Science Fundamentals. Larry Zibilske, Ph.D. Texas Plant & Soil Lab Edinburg, TX. Soil A Living, Breathing Dynamo Filled with Complex, Interacting Populations of Organisms. Dirt What’s left when nutrients have been depleted; unable to support large populations of organisms.
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Soil Science Fundamentals Larry Zibilske, Ph.D. Texas Plant & Soil Lab Edinburg, TX
Soil A Living, Breathing Dynamo Filled with Complex, Interacting Populations of Organisms
Dirt What’s left when nutrients have been depleted; unable to support large populations of organisms
Soil Constituents • Mineral Matter • Air • Water • Organic Matter
Mineralogy • Rocks (a noun, not a verb) • Contain elements in crystal form • Practically inert forms of oxygen, silicon, aluminum, iron, calcium, magnesium, copper, zinc…many elements except nitrogen.
Mineralogy Soil comes from rocks by weathering Over a long time, rain, ice, atmospheric acids, break rocks into smaller and smaller particles
Horizons Soils develop from bottom up O=Organic Layer A=“Plow Layer” B=Subsoil C=Parent Material
Soil Forming Modifiers • “Residual” soils are rare • Most have been transported from other places • Water • Wind
Soil Particles • Categorized by size • Sand: 2 mm down to 0.05 mm • Silt: 0.05 mm down to 0.002 mm • Clay: < 0.002 mm
Categorized by size • --as if they were bank accounts-- • Sand: $1,000,000 down to $25,000 • Silt: $25,000 down to $1000 • Clay: < $1,000
Soil Texture • How much of each particle size are in the soil • % Sand, silt, clay • Clay dominates texture issues • Loam not dominated by any one size
Soil Properties Cation Exchange Capacity “CEC”
CEC is the capacity of a soil to hold and exchange cations with soil water
Cations are chemical elements that have been ionized and now carry a positive (+) charge. Examples: Ca2+, Mg2+, NH4+
Anions are chemical elements that have been ionized and now carry a negative (-) charge. Examples: SO42-, NO3-, PO43-
The origins of CEC • Clay minerals are often layered crystals • Weather to very small flat, platy particles with lots of (-) charges on their edges • Imperfections inside the crystals also cause (-) charges. • Organic matter greatly affects CEC…more on this later.
Soil Particle edges have (-) charges Negative charges attract positively charged ions (cations)
Percent Base Saturation • Shows up on soil test reports • Proportion of bases occupying CEC • Ca, Mg, K, Na (not H or Al) • Index of fertility and management • Calcium should dominate: • Ca 80%, Mg 15%, K 5%, Na 1%
Soil differences in CEC Sandy Soils: 0-3 LS to SL Soils: 3-10 Loam Soils: 10-15 Clay Loams: 15-30 Clay Soils: >30
Organic Matter: 200! Relative importance of mineral particles and organic matter: CEC=(% OM x 200) + (% Clay x 50)
Example: Soil with 2% OM and 10% Clay (0.02 x 200) + (0.1 x 50)= 9
Soil pH (Soil Reaction) The balance between acidity and alkalinity in soil Technically, the negative log of the hydrogen ion concentration in the soil.
pH scale: 0-14 7.0 is neutral < 7.0 is acidic > 7.0 is alkaline
Affects solubility of soil nutrients Direct affects on plants
Where does all this acid come from? • Lack of basic elements (Ca, Mg,) in soil minerals from which the soil is generated. • Leaching of basic elements from the soil • Plant and microbe activity produces acidic end products
Why do other soils have little acid (alkaline soils)? • Formed from minerals with high amounts of basic elements • Leaching losses are less due to arid climate • Hostile growing conditions for plants and microbes means little biological acid formed
Effects of low soil pH (high acidity) Increased levels of several nutrients: Copper, Iron, Manganese, Zinc Leaching of bases from soil Soil structure problems
Effects of high soil pH (low acidity) Low solubility of metallic nutrients: Copper, Iron, Zinc, Manganese Marked reduction in P solubility (Ca, Mg) Soil structural problems
Soil Particles mean Pore Space • Spaces between soil particles allow air in and waste gases out • Pore space size determines soil aeration capacity • Air shares pore space with water • More water, less air
Pore size is very important • Sandy soil: Higher proportion of larger pores – easier air movement • Clay soil: Higher proportion smaller pores – slows air movement
Why is aeration important? • Oxygen is needed for plant roots • Oxygen is needed for many soil microbes • Affects chemical reactions: • Oxidation-reduction reactions affect many soil nutrients (N, S, Mn, Fe, Zn, etc.)
Balance between aerobic and anaerobic conditions • Both conditions exist in soils at the same time. How is that? • Natural process that alternates, often after rain events.
Soil Air Contents Nitrogen: 79% Oxygen: 5-15% Carbon Dioxide: 0.3-4% Trace gases: very small amounts
Aeration and Soil Biology Respiration vs. Fermentation • Respiration: Oxygen Present; high metabolic efficiency • Fermentation: Oxygen Absent; lower metabolic efficiency
Changes in Oxygen Status • Follow saturating rains • Follow heavy irrigation • Follow tillage (no-till?) • Compaction reduces (pore size declines)
Solution containing dissolved and suspended materials • Nutrients, some nutrients • Salts • Dissolved organic material
Carries nutrients to plants • Carries toxins/endproducts away • from plants • Movement of some microbes
Movement • Gravity; percolating water • Capillarity; adheres to surfaces surface, moves under tension
Plant Available Water • Held in soil under tension, but not too much. • Plants must use energy to pull water away from soil
The thinner the water film on soil particles, the more energy is needed to pull it away. • Plants must generate this energy