Soil: The Foundation For Land Ecosystems: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc
Soil: The Foundation For Land Ecosystems: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc
Soil: The Foundation For Land Ecosystems: © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc
Harvests have increased dramatically Farmer experimenters experiment and educate others, leading to sustainable agriculture
The sand has buried over 25 towns Building barriers and planting vegetation help limit moving sand and reclaim degraded land
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Desertification in China
Past neglect
90% of all food comes from land-based agriculture
Oceans and natural systems are being depleted
Protecting and nurturing soil is the cornerstone of food production and sustainability
But it has been overlooked repeatedly
Plowing the prairie and drought caused the U.S. Dust Bowl
Soils are degraded by erosion, salt buildup, and other problems Future productivity is undermined
Productive topsoil involves dynamic interactions among organisms, detritus, and mineral particles of the soil
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Topsoil formation
Soil formation
Soil characteristics
Most soils are hundreds of years old
They change very slowly
Classification of soil
Soil separates: small fragments smaller than stones
Sand: particles from 2.0 to 0.063 mm Silt: particles range from 0.063 to 0.004 mm Clay: anything finer than 0.004 mm
Gravel, cobbles, boulders: particles larger than sand You can see the individual rock particles in sand Clay particles become suspended in water
Clay is gooey because particles slide around each other on a film of water
Soil makeup
Proportions
Sand, silt, and clay constitute the mineral part of soil If one type of particle predominates, the soil is sandy, silty, or clayey Loam: a soil with 40% sand, 40% silt, and 20% clay To determine a soils texture:
Add soil and water to a test tube and let the soil settle Sand particles settle first, then silt, then clay
Properties
Soil properties are influenced by its texture
Larger particles have larger spaces separating them Small particles have more surface area relative to their volume Nutrient ions and water molecules cling to surfaces
Soil profiles
Horizons: horizontal layers of soil from soil formation
Can be quite distinct
Subsurface layers
A horizon (topsoil): below the O horizon
A mixture of mineral soil and humus Permeated by fine roots Usually dark May be shallow or thick Vital to plant growth Grows an inch or two every hundred years
Subsurface layers
B horizon (subsoil): below the E horizon
Contains minerals leached from the A and E horizons High in iron, aluminum, calcium, other minerals, clay Reddish or yellow colored from oxidized metals
Soil profile
Soil classification
Soil comes in an almost infinite variety of structures and textures Soils are classified by:
Order: the most inclusive group Suborder, groups, subgroups, families Class: best corresponds to the soil in question
Four major soil orders most important for agriculture, animal husbandry and forestry:
Mollisols, oxisols, alfisols, aridisols
Aridisols: soils of drylands (arid, semiarid, and seasonally dry areas) and deserts
Unstructured due to lack of vegetation and precipitation Thin, light colored Some areas may support rangeland animal husbandry Irrigation leads to salinization
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Mineral nutrients
Initially become available through rock weathering
Phosphate, potassium, calcium, etc. Much too slow to support normal plant growth Breakdown and release (recycling) of detritus provides most nutrients
Fertilizer
Agriculture removes nutrients from the soil Fertilizer: nutrients added to replace those that are lost Organic fertilizer: plant or animal wastes or both
Manure, compost (rotted organic material) Leguminous fallow crops (alfalfa, clover) Food crops (lentils, peas)
Transpiration
Water-holding capacity: soils ability to hold water after it infiltrates Poor holding capacity: water percolates below root level
Plants must depend on rains or irrigation Sandy soils
Plant-soil-water relationship
Aeration
Novice gardeners kill plants by overwatering (drowning)
Roots must breathe to obtain oxygen for energy
According to the principle of limiting factors, the poorest attribute is the limiting factor
Clay soils do not allow infiltration or aeration The best soils are silts and loams
They moderate limiting factors
Soil texture limitations are improved by the organic parts of the soil ecosystem
Detritus Soil organisms
Soil bacteria
Bacteria add nitrogen to the soil Nematodes: small worms that feed on roots
Detrimental to plants May be controlled by other soil organisms (e.g., fungi)
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Predatory fungus
Soil enrichment
Most detritus comes from green plants
So green plants support soil organisms
Soil organisms create the chemical and physical soil environment beneficial to plants Green plants further protect the soil by reducing erosion and evaporative water loss
So keep an organic mulch around garden vegetables
The mutually supportive relationship between plants and soil is easily broken
Keeping topsoil depends on addition of detritus
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Mineralization
If detritus is lost, soil organisms starve
Soil will no longer be kept loose and nutrient-rich
Humus decomposes, breaking down the clumpy aggregate structure of glued soil particles
Water- and nutrient-holding capacities, infiltration, and aeration decline
Topsoil results from balancing detritus and humus additions and breakdown
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Soil degradation
Turnover of plant material produces detritus
When humans cut forests, graze livestock, or plant crops, the soil is managed or mismanaged
Soil degradation: occurs when key soil attributes required for plant growth or other ecosystem services deteriorate Some reports on soil degradation are incorrect or outdated
75% of the land in Burkina Faso was said to be degraded But agricultural yields have increased due to soil and water conservation
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LADA
The Land Degradation Assessment in Drylands
Part of the UNs Food and Agricultural Organization
Land degradation: a reduction in the capacity of land to perform ecosystem functions and services that support society and development Hot spots: regions that are worsening
24% of global land area worsened between 1981 and 2003 South Africa: 29% of land is degraded Poor management
Erosion
Erosion: the process of soil and humus particles being picked up and carried away by water and wind
Occurs any time soil is bared and exposed
Soil removal may be slow and gradual (e.g., by wind) or dramatic (e.g., gullies formed by a single storm) Vegetative cover prevents erosion from water
Reducing the energy of raindrops Allowing slow infiltration
Grass is excellent for erosion control Vegetation also slows wind velocity
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Erosion
Desert pavement
Another devastating feature of wind and water erosion: differential removal of soil particles
Lighter humus and clay are the first to be carried away Rocks, stones, coarse sand remain The remaining soil becomes coarser
Deserts are sandy because wind removes fine material Desert pavement: occurs in some deserts
Removal of fine material leaves a thin surface layer of stones and gravel This protective layer is easily damaged (e.g., by vehicles)
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Cryptogamic crusts
Water erosion can change soil composition
Rainfall clogs soil Soil hardens when it dries Cryptograms (algae, lichens, mosses) grow
Regions with sparse rainfall or long dry seasons support grasses, scrub trees, and crops only if soils have good water- and nutrient-holding capacity
Erosion causes these areas to become deserts
Desertification: a permanent reduction in the productivity of arid, semiarid, and seasonally dry areas (drylands)
Does not mean advancing deserts
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Desertification
Drylands
Desertification is a process of land degradation
Due to droughts, overgrazing, erosion, deforestation, overcultivation It is extremely serious because it is permanent
Drylands in danger
1020% of drylands suffer some form of degradation
Inhabited by some of the worlds poorest
TerrAfrica: UNCCD alliance to coordinate efforts to arrest degradation and promote sustainable management Humans pose the greatest threat to dryland ecosystems
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No-till planting
No-till agriculture: a technique allowing continuous cropping while minimizing erosion
Routinely practiced in the U.S.
Inorganic fertilizer
Can provide optimal amounts of nutrients efficiently
But it lacks organic matter to support organisms and build soil structure
It can keep nutrient content high under intensive cultivation (two or more cash crops/year)
But mineralization and soil degradation proceed Additional fertilizer leaches into waterways
Overgrazing
Livestock graze on grasslands and cleared forest slopes
65% of drylands are grasslands
U.S. western rangelands produce less than 50% of the forage they produced before commercial grazing
Yet 20% of rangelands remain overstocked
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Degraded rangelands
The National Public Lands Grazing Campaign documents harmful effects of livestock grazing
Competition of livestock with native animals for food One-third of endangered species are in danger due to cattle-raising practices (predator control, fire suppression) Wooded zones along streams are trampled and polluted Polluted streams make fish species the fastestdisappearing wildlife group
Public lands
Overgrazing occurs because rangelands are public lands
Tragedy of the commons: the incentive is for all to keep grazing, even though the range is being overgrazed
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and Forest Service leases grazing rights on 2 million km2 of land
Federal land is owned by taxpayers Animal unit = one cow-calf pair or five sheep The grazing fee ($1.35/animal unit/month) is 10% what would be paid on private land
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When Congress and the BLM try to raise fees, western congressmen threaten to cut the BLM budget
Solutions to overgrazing
Better management could restore rangelands
Benefiting wildlife and cattle production
Deforestation
Porous, humus-rich forest soil efficiently holds and recycles nutrients
Also absorbs and holds water
Converting a forested hillside to grassland doubles the amount of runoff and increases nutrient leaching When forests are cut and soils are left exposed
Topsoil becomes saturated with water and slides off the slope Subsoil continues to erode
Excess sediments and nutrients from erosion are the greatest pollution problem in many areas Groundwater is depleted
Rainfall runs off and does not refill soil or ground water
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Irrigation
Irrigation: supplying water to croplands artificially
Dramatically increases production Is a major contributor to land degradation
Flood irrigation: river water flows into canals to flood fields Center-pivot irrigation: water is pumped from a well into a giant pivoting sprinkler The U.S. Bureau of Reclamation is involved with supplying irrigation water to the western states
Irrigating 4 million hectares (10 million acres)
Flood irrigation
Salinization
Salinization: the accumulation of salts in and on the soil
Suppresses plant growth
Salinization
Soil conservation
Healthy soils are essential for agricultural production
Human activities (overcultivation, overgrazing, deforestation) cause erosion
Sustainability means doing all we can to reduce erosion Soil conservation must be practiced at two levels
Individual landholders can best preserve soil through traditional knowledge and practices Public policies can lead to conservation or disaster
Sustainable Agriculture and Rural Development Initiative (SARD) coordinates efforts to reach small farmers
Farmers organize and adopt sustainable practices These practices can be used in other similar situations
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In 1982 the Italian government started an antierosion project in the Keita district, which has 230,000 people
Dams were built to catch summer rains 18 million trees were planted Rock dams stopped sheet erosion Local people (especially women) worked
Two paradigms
Desertification is happening in many areas
Leading to permanent damage, poverty, and misery Human factors: population growth, immigration, unjust land tenure, cash crops Erosion from overgrazing and overcultivation is made worse by drought and climate change
Desertification is not inevitable: another option is to recognize degradation and take corrective measures
Better management, soil and water conservation, diversifying income to relieve pressure on the land
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The U.S. Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education program (SARE) (1988)
Provides $512 million/year for building and disseminating knowledge about sustainable agriculture
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Farm legislation
Federal Agricultural Improvement and Reform Act (FAIR) (1996) reduced subsidies and controls
Farmers had greater flexibility over what to plant
Declining prices prompted farm aid packages, which maintained subsidies and controls 2002 Farm Security and Rural Investment Act subsidized farm products and kept price supports and farm income The Food, Conservation and Energy Act of 2008 kept high subsidies and encouraged farmers to plow grasslands
But it does have programs to conserve soil and wetlands
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Conservation programs
The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP; 1985)
Farmers are paid $125/hectare ($50/acre) per year Highly erodible land is put into forest or grass In 2008, 14 million hectares (34.7 million acres) were enrolled, saving 454 million tons of topsoil from erosion/year The 2009 acreage was reduced to 32 million acres
CHAPTER 11
Review Question-1
The process of soil formation creates a vertical gradient of layers that are known as a. loam. b. aeration. c. infiltration. d. horizons.
The process of soil formation creates a vertical gradient of layers that are known as a. loam. b. aeration. c. infiltration. d. horizons.
Review Question-2
The residue of partly decomposed organic matter is called ______ and is found in high concentrations at the bottom of the O horizon.
The residue of partly decomposed organic matter is called ______ and is found in high concentrations at the bottom of the O horizon.
Review Question-3
Mineralized soils can be revitalized through the addition of a. compost and other organic matter. b. materials from the C horizon. c. topsoil. d. all of the above.
Mineralized soils can be revitalized through the addition of a. compost and other organic matter. b. materials from the C horizon. c. topsoil. d. all of the above.
Review Question-4
All of the following lead to the loss of soil except a. splash erosion. b. horizon erosion. c. sheet erosion. d. gully erosion.
All of the following lead to the loss of soil except a. splash erosion. b. horizon erosion. c. sheet erosion. d. gully erosion.
Review Question-5
______ occurs when there is an accumulation of salts in soil as a result of ______. a. The tragedy of the commons; overgrazing b. Deforestation; logging c. Salinization; irrigation d. Overcultivation; no-till farming
______ occurs when there is an accumulation of salts in soil as a result of ______. a. The tragedy of the commons; overgrazing b. Deforestation; logging c. Salinization; irrigation d. Overcultivation; no-till farming
According to Fig. 11-3, soil with roughly 40% sand, 40% silt, and 20% clay is called a. loam. b. silt loam. c. sandy clay loam. d. loamy sand.
According to Fig. 11-3, soil with roughly 40% sand, 40% silt, and 20% clay is called a. loam. b. silt loam. c. sandy clay loam. d. loamy sand.
According to Fig. 11-2, when detritus, mineral particles, and the detritus food web interact, they form
a. leaves, stems, flowers, and seeds. b. leached minerals. c. nitrogen fixation. d. topsoil.
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According to Fig. 11-2, when detritus, mineral particles, and the detritus food web interact, they form
a. leaves, stems, flowers, and seeds. b. leached minerals. c. nitrogen fixation. d. topsoil.
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Thinking Environmentally-1
The human activities that lead to erosion and desertification are a. overcultivation, overgrazing, and deforestation. b. sustainability, stewardship, and sound science. c. pollution, overcultivation, and sustainability. d. overgrazing, sound science, and hypotheses.
The human activities that lead to erosion and desertification are a. overcultivation, overgrazing, and deforestation. b. sustainability, stewardship, and sound science. c. pollution, overcultivation, and sustainability. d. overgrazing, sound science, and hypotheses.
Thinking Environmentally-2
True or False: If soil conservation is to be successful, it must be practiced on the levels of both the individual landowner and public policy.
a. True b. False
True or False: If soil conservation is to be successful, it must be practiced on the levels of both the individual landowner and public policy.
a. True b. False