Friday 27 October 2017

A conservationist's perspective on soil science

I studied ecology and conservation as an undergraduate before taking the opportunities available to me and beginning a PhD investigating the sustainability of agricultural practices, particularly tillage (the preparation of soil for the planting of a crop).  I’m not from a farming background and had not studied soil science extensively before my PhD so faced a steep learning curve (a reason for my lack of blogging).  However, my education as an undergraduate equipped me with ways of thinking which could be addressed to this new context.  I’m writing this blog for two reasons and two audiences:  I want to promote soil science to those interested in ecology and conservation who may not have an agricultural or soil science background and I want to share a way of thinking about soil management which I hope might ring true to the farmers acting as custodians of our soils.

To me, the essence of conservation science is identifying situations in which the ability of nature to provide benefits to humans is threatened or being degraded.  Often these situations exist because of a lack of awareness of either the benefits that healthy ecosystems deliver or the impact of a practice on the ability of an ecosystem to continue to deliver these benefits.  The hope is that by making the value of a healthy ecosystem clear individuals or companies are motivated to protected its health and reap the rewards themselves (e.g. water companies working to restore upland peat ecosystems to save on water processing costs) or government actions can be taken to protect ecosystems which provide benefits to many people (e.g. national parks protected so that the public can benefit from spending time in these spaces).  Where the benefits or changes to the ecosystem are less visible then degradation is more likely. 

To state the obvious, food is a basic human requirement and you can’t grow (the vast majority) of it without soil.  It’s also valuable for its role in regulating the quality of water and the flow of water through the environment.  And, crucially, not all soil is equal.  Just as a dense, wide mangrove forest provides better flood protection than a narrow, sparse forest the ability of a soil to support crop growth and regulate water quality will depend on its properties.  This is where soil science gets more complex.  The ability of a soil to deliver these benefits will be determined by a range of chemical, biological and physical properties of the soil, all of which are interlinked and many of which are hard to observe by eye.  Soil degradation may go largely unnoticed, obscured by the use of fertilisers to compensate for a reduction in the soil’s capacity to cycle nutrients or the use of tillage to restructure soil whilst any changes in yield can be easily attributed to a year’s weather.  In fact, it might not be until an extreme weather event that the costs of soil degradation become visible in the form of brown runoff carrying valuable topsoil (and the associated nutrients) from the field to watercourses where it contributes to sedimentation and nutrient pollution.

Soil health (the ability of a soil to provide the required benefits) is affected by farming operations and tillage is the one I am most interested in.  Tillage can involve flipping the soil over (i.e. ploughing), or chopping and mixing soil, breaking up the soil structure.  The full range of pros and cons of tillage and synergies between reducing tillage and other practices such as cover cropping and glyphosate use are a topic for another day.  For now, I want to present tillage to (non-soil) ecologists and conservationists as a wonderful example of a ‘disturbance event’.  By rearranging the soil structure and killing many organisms (e.g. earthworms and fungi), tillage is analogous to hurricane or forest fire and the same questions apply (i.e. how long do biological communities take to recover? and what is the relationship between the intensity of the disturbance event and the effect on the biological community?) .  Whilst studying forest fires and hurricanes leaves you largely at the whim of nature, tillage is a disturbance event which you can have under your own control.  It affects an incredibly biodiverse system which underpins the generation of vitally important services such as nutrient cycling, soil structuring and biodegradation of pollutants.

As an undergraduate I preferred ecology to pathology because I preferred studying organisms and systems which I could see with a naked eye.  To me, conservation science is about identifying the overlooked, and for most of my life, soil hid in plain sight.  I have to encourage any ecology and conservation undergraduates to take a good look at soil ecology. 


To farmers, this is not meant as an attack on tillage or a plea for minimum or zero tillage systems, that’s something which I will address in another blog. 

Monday 19 June 2017

Blogging again

In the summer of 2014 I began a PhD in soil science and I am now drawing towards the end of it.  As I think is usual, the first two years of the PhD felt hectic, to say the least.  Now, as I begin my write up, I have time to reflect on my research and am bring the approach I developed as an undergraduate to bear on this new context.

And what a context.  Soil has been called “the poor [wo]man’s tropical rainforest” due the mind boggling diversity and complexity of its microbial, mesofaunal and macrofaunal communities and it has a complex 3d structure.  Unlike a tropical forest, if you want to investigate the effect of a disturbance event you don’t need to wait for a hurricane, climb trees and smoke out species or set up large scale deforestation plots, you can arrange tillage treatments with a farmer or simply take intact soil, pass it through a sieve and repack it.  If working with soil is like working with Arabidopsis or mice, it makes experiments in tropical forests look like working with redwoods or elephants.


So, some thoughts on the valuing our soils and what the valuing of this vitally important natural resource means for farming will follow, hopefully you will find them interesting.