Building Soil Organic Matter Takes Time
Conversations with lenders and landlords regarding rewards on manure applications and multi-species cover crops investments would likely be easier if financial rewards or measured soil physical properties came quickly. However, Dr. Sjoerd Willem Duiker, Penn State University Soil Scientist, says that a 1% increase in soil organic matter per year on a field scale is unrealistic.
To understand why a 1% soil organic matter build might be a better ‘decade goal’ than a yearly goal; consider the calculations. For example, one acre of land (6 inches thick) weighs about 2,000,000 pounds. Therefore, 1% of 2,000,000 pounds equals 20,000 pounds which includes both the stable (humus) and unstable organic components decomposing within the soil. When manure, such as solid dairy manure, is applied to fields, soil microbes decompose 80% of the manure for their food sources. The remaining solid manure will only provide 90 pounds of ‘stable carbon’ per ton of manure applied for building organic matter. Thus, to increase the total soil organic matter by just 1% through dairy manure applications, it will require a total application of 222 tons (or about 20 tons applied per year for 10 years).
Soil health building through manure applications can be further increased through grazing and incorporating cover crops into rotations. During the grazing process, part of the plant root system dies; then more soil carbon and nitrogen energy is available for microbes which in turn fix more stable soil aggregates and soil humus organic matter content.
This article was reviewed by Michael Sindelar, Rick Koelsch, and Leslie Johnson