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23.2: General Field Observations

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    25268
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    A simple but very good place to start assessing a soil’s health is to look at its general performance as you go about your normal practices. It’s something like wondering about your own performance during the course of a day: do you have less energy than usual? This might be an indication that something isn’t quite right. Likewise, there are signs of poor soil health you might notice as part of the normal process of growing crops:

    • Are yields declining?
    • Do your crops perform less well than those on neighboring farms with similar soils?
    • Does your soil delay water from infiltrating during a downpour?
    • When you dig up roots, do they look unhealthy or constrained?
    • Does the root system lack mycorrhizal fungi that promote healthy crops?
    • Do your crops quickly show signs of stress or stunted growth during wet or dry periods?
    • Is the soil obviously compacted? If you use tillage, does it plow up cloddy and take a lot of secondary tillage to prepare a fine seedbed?
    • Does the soil crust over easily? Do you observe signs of runoff and erosion?
    • Does it take more power to run tillage or planting equipment through the soil?
    • Do you notice increased problems with diseases or nutrient stress?

    These questions address problems with soil health, and any affirmative answers should prompt you to consider further action.


    This page titled 23.2: General Field Observations is shared under a CC BY-NC 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Fred Magdoff & Harold van Es (Sustainable Agriculture Research and Education (SARE) program) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.