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Introduction to Soils. Compliments of: Elizabeth Sulzman OSU Soil Science James Cassidy OSU Soil Science Teresa Matteson Benton SWCD Heath Keirstead Benton SWCD. Soil is …. Absolutely crucial for life on Earth!. www.pikeconservation.org/SoilEcosystem.htm. 5 functions of soil.
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Introduction to Soils • Compliments of: • Elizabeth Sulzman OSU Soil Science • James Cassidy OSU Soil Science • Teresa Matteson Benton SWCD • Heath Keirstead Benton SWCD
Soil is … Absolutely crucial for life on Earth! www.pikeconservation.org/SoilEcosystem.htm
5 functions of soil • Soil anchors and provides nutrients for plants. • Some animals live in soil; it is a habitat. • Soil recycles waste through decomposition. • Soil cleans and stores water. • Soil has engineering uses.
Active Factors Passive Factors The five factors of soil formation Soil = f(cl,o,r,p,t) • Climate • Organisms • Topography/relief • Parent Material • Time
Missoula Floods delivered parent material to Willamette Valley
Soil Soil Soil Soil Soil Soil Soil Soil O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter O horizon: organic matter, plant and animal litter A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon A horizon: topmost mineral horizon, darker than B horizon B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation B horizon: mineral horizon: zone of accumulation C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life C horizon: weathering soil; little organic matter or life R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock R horizon: unweathered parent material; rock
Soil has four components • Minerals • Organic matter • Water • Air
Mineral component • Makes up less than 50% of a “soil” • Varies in chemical composition • Contains particles of several size ranges (small to really really small) • Depends on the underlying geology/bedrock
Organic matter • Small constituent by weight, but huge influence on soil properties • Made up of partially decomposed plant & animal residues + organic compounds synthesized by soil microbes O ni
Functions of Organic Matter 1. Stabilizes soil structure, making soil easily managed 2. Increases the amount of water a soil can hold (and availability of the water) 3. Major source of plant nutrients 4. Main food/energy for soil organisms
Soil Water • Held to varying degrees depending on amount of water and texture of soil • Not all soil water is available to plants
Soil Air 1. High spatial variability 2. High temporal variability 3. High moisture content (Rh 100%) 4. High CO2 content 5. Low O2 content
Soil Physical Properties • Color • Texture • Structure • Aggregate stability
Soil Color Moisture Mineralogy (calcite, hematite, manganese) Coatings on particles: O.M. darkens underlying colors Fe and Al oxides (red & yellow)
Texture • Proportions of sand, silt, and clay Determines water holding capacity, water availability, nutrient supply capacity… • Loam is a soil texture with optimal sand, silt and clay contents for growing plants. • Clay is a soil particle size and a soil texture.
% silt % clay % sand
Relative Size Comparison of Soil Particles (fine earth fraction) “Big” smaller really small Sand silt clay
Fine clay has ~10,000 times as much surface area as the same weight of medium grain sand! Sand Clay
Coarse textured soils larger pores Fine textured soils greater total pore space Sand Clay
+ + + - - - NH4+ NH4+ - K+ + Ca++ - - - - - - - - Clay particle mostly negative charged surface - - - - - + - - - - Ca++ Fe++
Low Medium High Good Poor Medium High Slow Very slow Low Medium High Influence of Texture
Why Are Aggregates Important? • Increase porosity • Increase water infiltration, drainage, decrease runoff • Increase water holding capacity http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9_ItEhCrLoQ
Compaction Pore spaces are where plants get air, water, and nutrients. Soil compaction decreases valuable pore space between soil particles. Adapted from Sulzman and Frey, 2003
Compaction Less Greater
Take home message • Clay soils have a higher water-holding capacity than sandy soils • Water in coarse textured soils is easier for plants to remove than in fine textured soils • Much of the water in high-clay soils is unavailable to plants, while most water in sandy soils is available
A cup of soil contains... Bacteria Fungi Protozoa Nematodes Arthropods Earthworms 200 billion 100,000 meters 20 million 100,000 50,000 <1 The immobile ones all primarily found in the rhizosphere, the zone of soil closest to plant roots
Nematodes Protozoa
Mites Springtails
Worms Voles! Ant Colony!
hyphae • Aggregates held together by: • Fungal hyphae • Bacterial “glues” • Organic matter clay sand silt bacteria
Amoebae Microfauna Ciliate • feed on bacteria and fungi • release plant nutrients – protozoa KEY for N Flagellate Nematode Nematode
Collembola (springtails) Fungus feeding mite Nematode feeding mite Mesofauna • feed on fungi, protozoa, nematodes, mites • important in regulating populations of everything smaller
Macrofauna • shred plant material • feed on bacteria and fungi associated with organic matter Photo by Suzanne Paisley
Earthworms • Important component of soil fauna (not in acid soils, not in very dry soils) • Pass as much as 30 tons/ha of soil through their bodies each year • Casts (poop) are higher in N, P, K, Ca, Mg, pH, and CEC than soil • Promote good soil structure and aeration
Earthworm casts vs. soil 38.8 849 13.8
via organic matter Nitrogen Fixation (bacteria) • Take N2 from atmosphere, convert to soil NH4+ • Nodules formed on roots • Examples include: • Rhizobia on legumes • Frankia on alder • N N NH4+
SOIL ORGANIC MATTER Dead tissues and wastes: DETRITUS Living Organisms:BIOMASS Non-living, non-tissue: HUMUS SOM: What it is
Large surface area means more charge so greater ability to hold water and nutrients Sand Clay
Hands-on FUN!!! Set up a soil column to see how soil purifies water.
Back to why we might care… …plants = food
Erosion: • A process that transforms soil into sediment • Natural (soils form over time in most settings) • Human-induced (e.g., over-grazing, forest harvest) • Tied with damage to plant communities • Wind vs. water (usually 2/3 by water)