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IOFGA Conference 25 years

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But it is now only at the Newtonian stage of physics there is a long, long, way yet to go ... civilisations that do not conserve their soils do not persist. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: IOFGA Conference 25 years


1
  • IOFGA Conference - 25 years
  • The Importance of Soil in Organic Farming
  • 18 November 2007
  • Charles Merf Merfield
  • charles.merfield_at_teagasc.ie
  • www.merfield.com

2
The importance of soil?
  • I have answer for you, but your not going to
    like it, said Deep Thought. The answer, to
    Life, The Universe and Everything is, 42!
  • The problem is said Deep Thought you never
    really understood the question
  • Douglas Adams (RIP)

3
Soil the foundation of organics
  • The founding principle of organics
  • Soil Health Association (NZ 1941)
  • Soil Association (UK 1946)
  • The Soil and Health Foundation ? The Rodale
    Institute (USA 1947)
  • IFOAMs Principle of Health (first principle)
  • Organic Agriculture should sustain and enhance
    the health of soil, plant, animal and human as
    one and indivisible
  • The organic mantra
  • Healthy soil healthy food healthy people

4
The importance of soil for us all
  • Much of the non-organic world has woken up to the
    importance of soil
  • Even if they fail to acknowledge our strident
    efforts over nearly a century
  • The importance of soil for organics the
    importance of soil for the whole biosphere
  • Organics is the agriculture of the 21 century
    onwards

5
Soil science a misnomer?
  • Soil science was really only soil chemistry and
    physics from its start the mid 1800s until late
    1980s
  • Very difficult to study soil life
  • Only 10 of soil microbes can be cultured
  • Soil bacteria and fungi can equal 10 t/ha biomass
  • 1km of ploughed soil contains 10 billion
    bacteria, 10,000 km of fungal growth and
    immeasurable levels of algae
  • In an average arable field, the soil microbial
    biomass is equivalent to a stocking rate of 100
    sheep/ha
  • Only 6 of soil life is categorised!

6
The soil science bio-revolution
  • We have only just entered the age of real soil
    science physics chemistry biology ecology
  • DNA and other techniques causing a revolution
    serious in-roads into soil biology and ecology
    now possible
  • X-ray micro-tomography nano-scale secondary
    ionisation mass spectrometry (nanoSIMS) and
    scanning laser spectroscopy high resolution
    environmental probes and analysers remote
    sensing using unmanned aerial vehicles and
    latest-generation satellites adopting visible-
    and microwave-based imaging molecular-level
    analysis of biological systems including
    genomics, proteomics, metabolomics and associated
    bioinformatics

7
Soil bacterial communities from BHU (organic) and
LCF (non-organic) after DGGE (denaturing gradient
gel electrophoresis) separation of 16S rDNA
fragments. Each soil is represented by two lanes
corresponding to duplicate DNA extractions.
Arrows mark most prominent differences (Stark,
C.H. 2006)
8
Our founders foresight
  • Astounding foresight
  • Prevailing science was reductionist
    physical-chemical
  • They called for an systems based eco-biological
    approach
  • Soil science has now caught up with the vision of
    our founders
  • But it is now only at the Newtonian stage of
    physics there is a long, long, way yet to go

9
The importance of soil
  • Soil is the interface of the terrestrial
    biosphere
  • Where the mantle rocks meet and mix with the
    atmosphere, water and biology
  • the most critical parts of the carbon, water,
    nitrogen, oxygen and mineral cycles occur in
    soil, without it they function very differently
  • It is where life on land begins and ends

10
The importance of soil
  • Soil is the fundamental resource of
    civilisation
  • Soil is a non-renewable resource currently being
    unsustainably exploited
  • History shows that civilisations that do not
    conserve their soils do not persist.
  • (Horizons in soil research synthesis, UK Soils
    Research Advisory Committee, 2007)

11
Soil ecosystem
  • Soils are by far the most complex ecosystem with
    levels of biodiversity that far exceed any that
    prevail above ground
  • If soils failed it would almost certainly spell
    the end of nearly all terrestrial life, not just
    human civilisation
  • Considering our utter dependence, our
    understanding is heart stoppingly thin

12
UK Soils Research Advisory Committee
  • The primary missing link is the lack of a
    coherent theoretical/conceptual framework for
    soil behaviour that will serve to drive the
    challenging science needed and integrate extant
    and emergent research

13
Soils many roles
  • Soil produces the majority of our food
  • Except that from water (seas, lakes, rivers,
    etc.)
  • Even intensive non-soil farming systems
    ultimately depend on it
  • Soil filters and stores water
  • Supplies drinking water
  • Mitigates floods
  • Helps aquifers recharge
  • Soils bioremediate
  • Has huge but finite ability to breakdown or lock
    away the toxins we produce

14
Soils many roles
  • Soil has a critical part to play in the carbon
    cycle storing and releasing carbon, directly
    affecting global warming
  • Biochar / agrichar carbon negative (web)
  • Soil is the foundation for all terrestrial plant
    life and therefore the starting point of all
    above ground ecosystems
  • Soil is critical for maintaining our landscapes
    social and cultural effects

15
Organics and soil
  • Soil is the heart and soul of organics
  • As we chose to avoid chemical agriculture we are
    dependent on healthy soil
  • We have had the high intellectual and moral
    ground for 80 years
  • Science and society have now caught up with us

16
Organics and soil - the future
  • Science has come to agree with our view of soil,
    society is hopefully following
  • Soil science is moving to a holistic approach
  • Are we, the organic movement, listening to the
    results from the new science of soils?
  • If science shows us better ways of achieving our
    Principles and Ethics should we not use them?

17
Conclusion
  • Never treat soils like dirt

18
  • IOFGA Conference - 25 years
  • The Importance of Soil in Organic Farming
  • 18 November 2007
  • Charles Merf Merfield
  • charles.merfield_at_teagasc.ie
  • www.merfield.com
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