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Fundamentals of Soil Science. Soil Organisms. Introduction - Soil Organisms. Reading Assignment: Brady and Weil, Chapter 10 3 lectures It’s Alive Beneath the Surface Soil Engineers Blended learning materials available on web site and DVD. Learning Objectives. Lecture 1 – Its Alive
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Fundamentals of Soil Science Soil Organisms
Introduction - Soil Organisms • Reading Assignment: Brady and Weil, Chapter 10 • 3 lectures • It’s Alive • Beneath the Surface • Soil Engineers • Blended learning materials available on web site and DVD
Learning Objectives • Lecture 1 – Its Alive • Define key terms pertaining to soil organisms • Survey of organism types • Identify soil organisms’ activities within Food Web • Lecture 2 – Beneath the Surface • Describe how a community of microorganisms assimilates plant and animal materials, creating soil organic matter, recycling carbon and mineral nutrients, and supporting plant growth. • Relate soil quality to microorganisms • Lecture 3 – Soil Engineers • Explain why earthworms, ants and termites are called soil engineers • Discuss how people can manage soil to encourage a healthy, diverse soil community.
Lecture 1 Topics • Survey of Soil Organisms • Food Web
Lecture 2 Topics • Microorganisms living beneath the surface • Symbiotic Relationships • Nitrogen Fixation
Lecture 3 Topics • Earthworms • Ants and Termites • Soil Management
Learning Objectives • Lecture 1 – Its Alive • Define key terms pertaining to soil organisms • Survey of organism types • Identify soil organisms’ activities within Food Web
Lecture 1 – Topics • Survey of soil organisms • Food Web • Vocabulary
Do you remember? • How is organic matter important to the healthy functioning of soil? • Stabilization of soil aggregates • Improved water holding capacity • Reservoir of plant nutrients and cation exchange capacity • Now you’ll learn….Soil Organisms are the principle players in the dynamic processes that control organic matter turnover
Why is the soil alive? A handful of healthy soil likely contains billions of organisms. A diversity of unseen creatures interact in the soil – they are microorganisms.
How many soil organisms per gram of soil? Bacteria – 1 billion/g Actinomycetes - 200 million/g Fungi – 10-20 million/g Protozoa – 1 million/g Nematodes – 50/g
What are the creatures in the soil? • Fauna (animals) • Macrofauna >2 mm (moles, prairie dogs, earthworms, millipedes) • Mesofauna 0.1-2 mm (tiny springtails and mites) • Microfauna <0.1 mm (nematodes and single-celled protozoans) • Flora (plants) • Roots of plants as well as microscopic algae and diatoms • Microbes <0.1 mm • Fungi (Eukaryotes) • Bacteria and Archaea (Prokaryotes)
Survey: Soil Microbes Soil bacteria Bacteria on fungi Fungi decomposing leaf tissue Mycorrhizal bodies and hyphae Ectomycorrhizae Vesicles Images from NRCS: http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/concepts/soil_biology/biology.html
Survey: Soil Flora and Microfauna Plant root, Fig 10.10 Diatoms, http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/chromista/diatoms/ Root feeding nematode Protozoa: amoeba eating bacteria Images from NRCS: http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/concepts/soil_biology/biology.html
Survey: Mesofauna and Macrofauna Fungal feeder – orabatid mite Predators Herbivore Shredders Images from NRCS: http://soils.usda.gov/sqi/concepts/soil_biology/biology.html
Satisfying Carbon Needs • Soil Organism classification: • Heterotrophs – rely on organic compounds for carbon and most also for energy. • Autotrophs – obtain carbon from carbon dioxide and energy from photosynthesis or oxidation of various elements.
Who eats what? Soil organisms can be grouped by what they eat: • Herbivores – • Detritivores – • Predators – • Fungivores – • Bacterivores – • Parasites – Living plants (parasitic nematodes, insect larvae, rodents, termites, ants, beetle larvae) dead plants animals fungi bacteria live off of but do not consume other organisms.
What are Organisms Doing? • Soil is an ecosystem. Many scientists believe that there are more species in existence below the surface of the Earth than above it. • A balance among these organisms make possible the functions of a healthy, high quality soil.
Measures of Diversity • Species diversity – • Functional diversity – • Functional redundancy – organisms present are evenly distributed among a large number of species the capacity to use a variety of substrates and carry out an array of processes. presence of several organisms to carry out each enzymatic or physical process
Diversity by Location • Forested areas – more diverse soil fauna and more fungal-dominated microflora • Grasslands – Total fauna mass per hectare and level of activity higher than in forest • Cultivated Fields – lower levels in numbers and biomass of soil organisms than native grasslands due to loss caused by tillage.
Soil Food Web Solar Energy Plants, algae, lichens, bacteria Primary Producers By-products Plants debris (detritus) CO2 Saprophytic bacteria, actinomycetes Mites & other shredders Primary Consumers Earthworm shredders Saprophytic fungi Nematodes (root feeders) Mycorrhizal fungi Heat Energy Loss Feces and dead bodies Mineral Nutrients Secondary Consumers Bacteria, fungi & actinomycetes Nematodes (root feeders) Protozoa Mites Springtails Earthworms Humus High Level Consumers Beetle, spider, centipede, ant predators Mammal and bird predators Predatory mites Amoebas Earthworms Nematodes
Summary • Soil is a complex, diverse ecosystem • Organisms incorporate plant residues into soil, return CO2 to the atm where it can be re-fixed into plants. In the process, soil organic matter is formed and essential plant nutrients are released. • 80-90% of metabolic activity in soil food web is bacteria and fungi • The activity of organisms is more important than the identity. Functional diversity vs. species diversity.