When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Soil health - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_health

    Soil health testing is pursued as an assessment of this status [1] but tends to be confined largely to agronomic objectives. Soil health depends on soil biodiversity (with a robust soil biota), and it can be improved via soil management, especially by care to keep protective living covers on the soil and by natural (carbon-containing) soil ...

  3. Soil microbiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_Microbiology

    Fungi are abundant in soil, but bacteria are more abundant. Fungi are important in the soil as food sources for other, larger organisms, pathogens, beneficial symbiotic relationships with plants or other organisms and soil health. Fungi can be split into species based primarily on the size, shape and color of their reproductive spores, which ...

  4. Edaphology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edaphology

    The history of edaphology is not simple, as the two main alternative terms for soil science—pedology and edaphology—were initially poorly distinguished. [10] Friedrich Albert Fallou originally conceived pedology in the 19th century as a fundamental science separate from the applied science of agrology, [11] a predecessor term for edaphology, [12] a distinction retained in the current ...

  5. Bill brings soil health focus to watershed management work ...

    www.aol.com/bill-brings-soil-health-focus...

    Good soil health helps improve water quality and reduce flooding by retaining water that runs off Iowa farm fields. But some people said the legislation is too restrictive and doesn’t fully ...

  6. Soil biology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_biology

    Soil biology is the study of microbial and faunal activity and ecology in soil. Soil life, soil biota, soil fauna, or edaphon is a collective term that encompasses all organisms that spend a significant portion of their life cycle within a soil profile, or at the soil-litter interface.

  7. Disease suppressive soils - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disease_Suppressive_Soils

    A greater diversity of plants in a soil leads to a greater diversity of microbes in the rhizosphere and furthermore can lead to greater suppression of soil diseases. [9] Management, such as informed crop rotation and soil solarization, can create suppressive soils that naturally suppress pathogens. [10]

  8. Microbial inoculant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microbial_inoculant

    Microbial inoculants, also known as soil inoculants or bioinoculants, are agricultural amendments that use beneficial rhizosphericic or endophytic microbes to promote plant health. Many of the microbes involved form symbiotic relationships with the target crops where both parties benefit . While microbial inoculants are applied to improve plant ...

  9. Soil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil

    Soil, also commonly referred to as earth, is a mixture of organic matter, minerals, gases, liquids, and organisms that together support the life of plants and soil organisms. Some scientific definitions distinguish dirt from soil by restricting the former term specifically to displaced soil. Soil measuring and surveying device