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21 Acres Soil Assessment Team: forestry students in mewar university Rajasthan Water and Sustainability Co-ordinator: Manzoor Nabi

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Page 1: Soil Assessment

21 Acres Soil Assessment

Team: forestry students in mewar university Rajasthan

Water and Sustainability

Co-ordinator: Manzoor Nabi

Page 2: Soil Assessment

Location: 21 Acres

• 21 Acres includes a bio-diverse farmstead with trails for physical activity, interpretive educational signage, and cultivated farm plots used to demonstrate sustainable and organic farming practices.

• 21 Acres is committed to making local, sustainable-grown food a cornerstone of healthy lifestyles and communities.

Page 3: Soil Assessment

Soil Tests

•Texture

•PH

•Phosphorus

•Potassium

•Nitrate

•Ammonia Nitrogen

•Humus

•Nematodes

Page 4: Soil Assessment

Texture

• 200 ml of soil was measured.Weights

(g) Wet Dry Totals Texture

Field 1        

Site A 171.7 102.6 69.1 Sandy Loam

Site B 181 107.1 73.9 Sandy Loam

Site C 163.9 85.9 78 Sandy Loam

         

Field 2        

Site A 136.1 89.7 46.4 Loam

Site B 144.5 99.7 44.8 Silt Loam

Site C 158.7 73.1 85.6 Sandy Loam

         

Field 3        

Site A 162.6 120.4 42.2 Loam

Site B 181.1 119.9 61.2 Silt Loam

Site C 181.5 118.2 63.3 Sand

Page 5: Soil Assessment

pH• Results

- Field 1:

Site A - pH = 5.0 - 5.2 Site B - pH = 5.2 Site C- pH = 5.1- Field 2: Site A - pH = 5.8 - 6.2 Site B - pH = 6.2 - 6.4 Site C- pH = 6.0 - 6.2- Field 3:

Site A - pH = 6.0 Site B - pH = 5.8 - 6.2 Site C - pH = 6.0

• RoleThe relative acidity or alkalinity of soil is indicated by its pH. The pH scale runs from 0 to 14. Any pH reading below 7 is acidic and any pH above 7 is alkaline. A pH of 7 indicates a neutral soil. The pH is important because it influences the availability of essential nutrients.

• RecommendationsPotatoes grow best in pHconditions from 4.8-6.5,Strawberries in 5.0-6.0, and carrots and lima beans prefer soil from 5.5-6.5 pH.

Page 6: Soil Assessment

Phosphorus

• Results– Field 1

Site A - 25 lb/aSite B - 75 lb/aSite C - 75 lb/a

– Field 2Site A - 25 lb/aSite B - 25-50 lb/aSite C - 75 lb/a

– Field 3Site A - 75 lb/aSite B - 75 lb/aSite C - 25 lb/a

Phosphorus is recorded in pounds per acre (lb/a)

• RolePhosphorus in soil is essential for strong roots. It also helps protect plants against disease and poor weather conditions allowing them to grow faster.

• Recommendation Cover cropping either green manure or clover. Adding bone meal or phosphate rock will increase phosphate levels. Bat guano is also good.

Page 7: Soil Assessment

Potassium• Results

– Field 1Site A - 160 lb/aSite B - 180 lb/aSite C - 150 lb/a

– Field 2Site A - <100 lb/aSite B - <120 lb/aSite C - <100 lb/a

– Field 3Site A -110 lb/aSite B -130 lb/aSite C -120 lb/a

Potassium is recorded in pounds per acre (lb/a)

• Role Potassium is essential for optimum growth. Tomatoes, potatoes, eggplant, and beets thrive in high levels of potassium. Potassium is also needed for sugar formation in fruits and vegetables, so more sufficient levels of potassium equals better tasting fruits and vegetables.

• RecommendationCover crop or use compost to increase potassium in the soil. Add organic fertilizers such as kelp meal, greensand, or sulfate of potash.

Page 8: Soil Assessment

Nitrate Nitrogen

• Results– Field 1:

Site A: 40 pounds per acre

Site B: 40 pounds per acre

Site C: 40 pounds per acre– Field 2:

Site A: 20 pounds per acre

Site B: 40 pounds per acre

Site C: 20 pounds per acre– Field 3:

Site A: 40 pounds per acre

Site B: 40 pounds per acre

Site C: 20 pounds per acre

• RoleNitrogen is essential to all crops success.

• Recommendation•Fertilizers… No Way!•Sod, alfalfa grasses…Oh Yay!

Sod offers the soil the chance to decompose organic matter as opposed to using N fertilizers made from fossil fuels.

Page 9: Soil Assessment

Presence of Nitrate Nitrogen

• Nitrogen is essential the success of any crop.

• We observed Rhizobium bacteria() on the crop roots at 21 Acres.

Page 10: Soil Assessment

Nematodes

• We discovered Nematodes in the soil at 21 Acres!

• Nematodes are an excellent source of plant-available Nitrogen production in the soil.

Page 11: Soil Assessment

Ammonia Nitrate• Results

– Field 1

Site A: Very LowSite B: Very LowSite C: Very Low

– Field 2

Site A: Very LowSite B: Very LowSite C: Very Low

– Field 3

Site A: Very LowSite B: Very LowSite C: Very Low

• RoleAmmonia is another form of nitrogen. In forest soils ammonia is the most abundant form of nitrogen. If there is an adequate rate of nitrogen transformation, the humus layers of a forest soil will produce excessive concentrations of ammonia nitrogen.

• RecommendationCover cropping and Green manure crops.

Page 12: Soil Assessment

Humus• Results

– Field 1Site A: 1

Site B: 1Site C: 2

– Field 2

Site A: 1Site B: 1Site C: 1

– Field 3

Site A: 1Site B: 2Site C: 2

Scale: 1-low, 2-Medium, 3-High (Agricultural

soils)2-Low, 3-Medium, 4, high (Garden

greenhouse soils)3-Low, 4-Medium, 5-High (Organic

soils)

• RoleHumus consists of the complex remains of fresh plant and animal residue after extensive chemical and biological breakdown. It accounts for 60-70% of the total organic carbon in soils. It can modify the physical properties of soil, strongly affecting its chemical and biological properties.Mineralization process that converts raw organic matter to the relativity stable substance that is humus feeds the soil population of micro-organisms and other creatures, helping maintain high levels of soil life.

• RecommendationCover cropping, Green manure crop.

Page 13: Soil Assessment

THANK YOU!

Eat some dirt and Hug a tree, Team Dirty