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NATIONAL LANDCARE WEBINAR. “Regenerating Australia’s Soil Health ” PART 1 - Healthy Soils Why is this important, what is the science telling us & a view from on the ground Mike Grundy. Components of healthy soils and the outcomes required?. Sustainable Agriculture flagship. Mike Grundy.
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NATIONAL LANDCARE WEBINAR “Regenerating Australia’s Soil Health ” PART 1 - Healthy Soils Why is this important, what is the science telling us & a view from on the ground Mike Grundy
Components of healthy soils and the outcomes required? Sustainable Agriculture flagship Mike Grundy May 2013
A healthy soil is able to provide the full set of services that is within its nature to provide Soil health
Produce biomass and food Store and provide water, nutrients and support Filter pollutants Store and cycle carbon Habitat for a teeming biodiversity Biodiscovery of new drugs and treatments Moderate climate Store our history . . . and some remarkable and unique soil ecosystem patterns: the heaths on poor sandy soils, the extensive natural grasslands on cracking clay soils, the rainforests on deep red volcanic soils, the wildflowers on WA’s ironstone gravel soils Soil services – some obvious, some hidden
Soils ain’t soils: There are many types and capacities So health means different things in different places Soils are diverse – a healthy soil may be a challenging soil!
Soils change over time Burkett – Southwest U
Soils have never been static: They have changed and are changing and – we change them very quickly Resistance and resilience vary – but can be improved. Soils have thresholds – coming back may not always be possible Soils change over time
Soils are part of landscapes and are connected across them Soils are part of the environment – the climate and vegetation shape the soil and its properties as much as the rock it forms on and the management it has endured Soils have many dimensions
Soils are both living and non-living – both aspects are important Soils have five main categories of components – mineral matrix, organic matrix, biota, air, water – and these change with depth Soils have layers
prevent and/or repair land degradation maintain the original / inherent qualities improve for food and fibre production needs The three main soil health activities
Manage to prevent damage – and to improve resilience Know your resource – the baseline and the change Whatever you do – do it efficiently Replace what you remove Walk softly on the earth Manage the dimensions – depth, breadth and time Manage the water Some aspects of soil health management
energy supply for biological processes direct nutrient supply to plants (particularly nitrogen, phosphorus and sulfur) capacity to retain and exchange nutrients aggregation of soil particles and stability of soil structure water storage and availability to plants beneficial thermal properties pH buffering (helping to maintain acidity at a constant level) Soil carbon – the currency of the soil?
Manage where: agricultural practices increase soil acidity (e.g. use of high-analysis nitrogen fertilisers, large rates of product removal) the soil has a low capacity to buffer the decrease in pH (e.g. infertile, light-textured soils) the soil already has a low pH. Soil acidification – a threat to soil health
Soil erosion – holding on to the soil Managing cover, water, and timing
Soil physical condition: Build resilience with soil carbon Reduce tillage and compaction Soil nutrient status: Focus on balance – eg. the strange case of the nation’s P story (too much in the south and too little in the north) Soil biology: The live part of soil – working constantly on biological transformation Beneficial and challenging components Vital – but difficult to measure and characterise – and much to learn Concentrate on the conserving the surface, the organic matter levels
Electrical conductivity (dS/m 1:5) 0 30 60 90 1.20 1.50 discharging soil intermittent discharging soil Each soil / landscape will have functions on a farm Healthy soils will result where the management matches the function Highly resilient soils can be pushed further – and free up vulnerable and marginal areas Know your soils “normal” soil recharging soil
Less degrading land – and less leakage into the environment Higher levels of productivity – efficiency in water, nutrients, energy Unique habitats – soil-vegetation-fauna survive and thrive http://soilhealthknowledge.com.au/ http://vro.dpi.vic.gov.au/dpi/vro/vrosite.nsf/pages/soilhealth_home The results of an improvement in soil health?