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Chapter 5 etc.

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Chapter 5 etc. Soils: formation and fertility – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5 etc.


1
Chapter 5 etc. Soils formation and fertility
2
Outline
  • 1. Nutrient Cycles
  • What are nutrient cycles? major cycles (Ch 5-1)
  • Water Cycle (Ch 5-2)
  • Carbon Cycle (Ch 5-3)
  • Nitrogen Cycle (Ch 5-4)
  • Phosphorus Cycle (Ch 5-5)
  • Sulfur Cycle (Ch 5-6)
  • 2. Nutrient Cycling Sustainability
    (Ch 5-9)
  • 3. Soil (Ch 5-8)
  • layers/profiles, texture porosity, acidity
  • Soil Erosion and Degradation (Ch 14-6)
  • Soil Conservation (Ch 14-7)

3
Soil Profile
A soil profile is a description of the soil
horizons (layers) from the surface where the
plants are growing to the geologic material (rock
or sediment) at the base of the soil. This is
usually considered the parent material from
which the soil formed.
4
Soil Types
  • Soils can be categorized into two major types
  • Organic soil - a soil in which more than half of
    the soil profile thickness is composed of organic
    matter (gt30 cm thick, gt20 organic matter).
  • Mineral soil - a soil whose properties are
    determined by mineral (rock) matter, rather than
    organic matter.

5
Organic Soil example Surface organic layer
(O-horizon) is gt 30 cm thick.
6
  • Humus-partially decomposed organic matter.
  • Organic matter (OM) importance
  • Organic acids and colloids in OM bind
    contaminants and help make nutrients available to
    plants.
  • OM holds onto water and releases it slowly.
  • OM in soil is a carbon reservoir.
  • Dark brown or black color in soil usually
    indicates high nitrogen
    content (and lots of humus).

7
Components of Soil Organic Matter (OM)
8
Soil Organisms
  • By-products from growing roots and plant residue
    feed soil organisms. In turn, soil organisms
    support plant health as they
  • decompose organic matter,
  • cycle nutrients,
  • enhance soil structure,
  • and control the populations of soil organisms
    including crop pests.
  • - USDA/NRCS

9
3. Soil Characteristics
10
3. Soil Characteristics
11
Mineral Soil Horizons
  • A horizon - Surface horizon of a mineral soil.
    It has most of the organic matter. Often dark
    brown or dark gray.
  • E horizon - Present in some acid (low pH), forest
    soils. A zone of Eluviation (washing out) of
    clays, and iron and aluminum oxides. Often light
    gray or white.
  • B horizon - A zone of accumulation of clays, and
    iron and aluminum oxides. May be reddish in
    color. May have blocky or prismatic texture.
  • C horizon - A zone that is relatively unaffected
    by biological activity. It may be the parent
    material of the soil.

12
How do horizons form?
  • soil horizon animation

13
  • Particle Size
  • Clay- Very fine (microscopic grains)
  • Silt- Fine
  • Sand- Medium
  • Gravel- Large

14
What type of soil is 20 Clay, 70 silt, And 10
Sand?
100 Clay
Silty Loam
100 Sand
100 Silt
15
Loams Roughly equal mixture of clay, silt, sand
and humus.
16
Soil Texture Nutrient-Holding Capacity Water- Infiltrating Capacity Water-Holding Capacity Permeability
Clay Good Poor Good Poor
Silt Medium Medium Medium Medium
Sand Poor Good Poor Good
Loam Medium Medium Medium Medium
17
  • Soil Porosity is the amount of pore space a
    soil has.
  • Porosity is affected by the sizes, shapes and
    arrangements of particles.
  • It is also influenced by plants and soil
    organisms that create channels and pores in
    soil.
  • Compaction reduces pore space. Soil holds less
    water or air.

18
Soil Permeability
  • A measure of how connected the pore spaces are to
    each other.
  • Determines the water and air capacity of the
    soil.
  • Clay will hold onto water because the clay
    mineral grains are negatively charged at their
    edges. Some clays also swell when water is added.

START
19
Soil Fertility
  • Soil fertility is influenced by
  • Porosity/compaction
  • Drainage
  • Nutrient content
  • Nutrient availability
  • Salinity and other toxins

20
What are the major soil nutrients?
  • macronutrients Sulfur, Phosphorous, Magnesium,
    Calcium, Potassium, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Carbon and
    Hydrogen.
  • micronutrients molybdenum, copper, zinc,
    manganese, iron, boron, chlorine. (less
    important)
  • Most soil nutrients are positively charged ions
    (cations).

21
Nutrient availability
  • The three biggest factors for nutrient
    availability for a moist soil are
  • clay content, organic matter (OM) content, and
    pH.
  • The Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) is a measure
    of how available nutrients are to plants in the
    soil. It is a lab measurement.
  • CEC can be estimated by determining the amount of
  • Clay
  • Organic matter
  • IF the pH is about 7.0 (neutral)

22
Why does clay matter?
  • Nutrients are mostly cations (positively charged
    ions).
  • Clays are negatively charged at their edges.
  • Clays hang on to cations loosely enough, so they
    are available to plants.

23
Why does OM matter?
  • Its surface is negatively charged, so it has lots
    of places for positive ions to loosely attach and
    become available for plants to use.
  • It tends to contain a lot of carbon and other
    nutrients in the big organic molecules that make
    up the OM itself.
  • Its food for the decomposers, etc.
  • The chemistry gets messy, but thats the gist of
    it

24
Why does pH matter?
H competes with other nutrients for sites on OM
and clays. During acid leachingnutrients are
washed away.
25
Tropical soils why do clay, OM and pH matter?
  • Organic matter is broken down rapidly in the
    tropics (its hot!) and is removed.
  • High rainfall leads to lots of leaching
  • Leaching of soils in the tropics leads loss of
    clays in upper layers and laterization.
  • Tropical soils are generally low in fertility as
    a result.

26
Sodium poison in soil
  • Sodium modifies the structure of some clays to
    seal the soil. Water does not penetrate.
  • Too much sodium (salt) is toxic to most plants.
    Excess sodium can be tolerated by some plants
    that have evolved to deal with it.
  • If salt builds up, it must be leached away by
    flooding, or other chemicals (calcium sulfate)
    must be applied to the soil to restore fertility.

27
What is NOT generally considered a benefit of
organic matter
  1. It contributes to overall soil fertility by
    helping make nutrients available to plants.
  2. It binds contaminants.
  3. It stains your clothes when you dig in the dirt.
  4. It retains and slowly releases water.
  5. It is a carbon sink, meaning that it sequesters
    carbon and keeps it out of the atmosphere.

28
The B horizon is
  1. A soil layer dominated by organic matter.
  2. A mineral soil layer that has some deposits of
    iron oxides, aluminum oxides, and clays that turn
    it red. Or it may have a prismatic or blocky
    structure.
  3. Parent material that is virtually unaltered.
  4. A layer or zone of eluviation where iron oxides
    and aluminum oxides have been leached out by
    water.

29
What is the difference between porosity and
permeability?
  1. Only porosity can be improved by soil organisms,
    not permeability.
  2. Porosity can be reduced by compaction (squishing
    the soil), but permeability cannot.
  3. Porosity is a measure of total pore space, while
    permeability measures how connected the pores
    (holes) are.
  4. You measure porosity by pouring water through the
    soil. You cant measure permeability this way.

30
How does clay improve soil fertility?
  1. It doesnt. Clay decreases soil fertility.
  2. Clay increases the availability of nutrients to
    plants.
  3. Clay increases the permeability of the soil.
  4. Clay is a nutrient.

31
What is the optimal pH for soil fertility for
most food crops?
  • a. Less than 7.0 (acid)
  • b. 7.0 (neutral)
  • c. Greater than 7.0 (alkaline)
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