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Soil Composition

Soil Composition. 1/13/12. What determines characteristics of soil? . Physical (such as water) Parent material (chemical make-up) Life (biological activity) climate. What are the layers of soil? .

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Soil Composition

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  1. Soil Composition 1/13/12

  2. What determines characteristics of soil? • Physical (such as water) • Parent material (chemical make-up) • Life (biological activity) • climate

  3. What are the layers of soil? O Horizon - The top, organiclayer of soil, made up mostly of leaf litter and humus (decomposed organic matter).A Horizon - The layer called topsoil. Seeds germinate and plant roots grow in this dark-colored layer. It is made up of humus (decomposed organic matter) mixed with mineral particles.

  4. E Horizon - This eluviation (leaching) layer is light in color; this layer is. It is made up mostly of sand and silt, having lost most of its minerals and clay as water drips through the soil (in the process of eluviation).B Horizon- subsoil contains clay and mineral deposits (like iron, aluminum oxides, and calcium carbonate) that it receives from layers above it when mineralized water drips from the soil above.C Horizon - regolith: consists of slightly broken-up bedrock. Plant roots do not penetrate into this layer; very little organic material is found in this layer.R Horizon - The unweathered rock (bedrock) layer.

  5. What is soil fertility? • The capacity of soil to supply nutrients necessary for plant growth. • Macronutrients: S, P, Mg, Ca, K, N, O, C, H • Micronutrients Cu, Zn, Mn, Fe

  6. What role does decomposition play in nutrient cycling in soil? • Decomposition provides nitrogen, phosphorus and carbon to the soil.

  7. What is a limiting factor? • The chemical/nutrient or material that may inhibit the fertility of the soil. • i.e. phosphorus

  8. What is Liebig’s Law of the minimum? • The idea that some single factor determines the growth and therefore the presence of a species.

  9. What is the synergistic effect? • Availability of one resource affects the response of an organism to some other resource. • i.e. increasing N to the plant increases phosphorus uptake N + P =

  10. Does osmosis effect seeds? • YES! • Osmosis = the passing of water across a semipermeable membrane, to an area with a higher salt concentration.

  11. Pros and Cons of Inorganic fertilizer? Advantages Disadvantages Adds no humus or organic matter to soil/decreases water holding capacity Lowers oxygen content of soil and keeps nutrients from being taken up as efficiently Does not completely supply micronutrients Requires large amounts of E for production, transport and application • Easily obtained and transported • Cheaper • Nutrients are concentrated/less applied • Release specific minerals

  12. Advantages Disadvantages Release nitrous oxide (N2O) a greenhouse gas Over application harms plants Aquatic pollution resulting from RUNOFF in surface or groundwater is detrimental to humans and ecosystems Organic fertilizers may be free if they can be obtained • Nutrients immediately available • Increase soil fertility • Increase crop yield • Speeds up the growing process

  13. Soil Composition 2 1/13/12

  14. What are the soil textures?

  15. What some chemical soil tests? • pH • Salinity • Organic content • Ion Exchange

  16. What do physical tests look for? • Permeability • Porosity • Texture • Moisture content • Particle density • Soil structure/clumping • Percolation rate • Capillary of soil • Soil compaction • Soil profile Analysis • Color

  17. What are the effects of grazing on soil?

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