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Ch. 4: Soils, Nutrition etc.
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Soil Definition: Natural body with layers (horizons)
Mineral + organic matter (OM) Differs from parent material: substance from which soil derived
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Weathering Factors Mineral component: generated by weathering rock
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Soil Texture A: Sand & silt Major particle sizes (know these) B: clays
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Textural triangle Distribution particles by size class: texture
Loam: mix sand, silt, clay Texture important: fertility, water availability
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Soil Structure Particles form peds (visible when soil dry)
Affect water + root penetration How important??
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Organic matter (OM) Humus: partly decomposed OM
Usually negatively charged: carboxyl groups (-COOH) phenols
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Soil Fertility Defn: Ability soil hold & deliver nutrients
Determined by texture, organic matter, pH Holding soil….
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Soil Fertility Texture: clays important Huge surface area
Negatively charged: hold cations useful for plants (Ca++, K+, Mg++, Zn++) Huge surface area Surface of clay in top 10 cm 0.5 ha soil would cover continental U.S.!!
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Soil Fertility Humus has negative charge: clay & humus hold cations
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Soil Fertility Cation Exchange Capacity: amount negative charge per unit soil Units? centimoles (+) charge/kg dry soil (cmolc/kg) Represents “potential fertility”
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Soil Fertility Examples: Great Plains prairie soil: 30 cmolc/kg
NE US conifer forest soil: 2 cmolc/kg
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Soil Fertility H+ (and Al+++) also attracted to negative charge.
Take up space: not useful to plants. Base saturation (BS): % exchange sites occupied by “good” cations (bases: Ca++, Mg++, K+) plus Na+
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Soil Fertility BS, pH & CEC determine “actual fertility”
1) High CEC + high BS: more fertile 2) If BS low: pH low (lots H+)
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Soil pH Measure H+ ion concentration
Most AL soils: (strongly acid) Black Belt soils: (alkaline)
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Soil pH pH effects: 1) H+ damages roots (@ extreme pH values)
2) soil microflora Acid favors fungi (incl. mycorrhizal) Alkaline favors bacteria 3) soil structure (sometimes)
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Soil pH 4) nutrient availability. Major pH influence!
Nutrient deficiency: Acid: N, P, Ca, Mg, K, S Alkaline: Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu, Co, B
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Soil pH 4) nutrient availability. Major pH influence!
Nutrient toxicity: Acid: Fe, Mn, Zn, Cu, Co Alkaline: Mo
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Soil pH Plant sensitivity & nutrient needs matter Black Belt lab (#4):
Black Belt soil: no pines Fe deficiency likely
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