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Focus on Biology Pushes Soil Health and No-Till System to Next Level | Farmers.gov
Focus on Biology Pushes Soil Health and No-Till System to Next Level | Farmers.gov
During No-Till November, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service promotes the economic and environmental benefits of not disturbing the soil and “keeping the stubble” to improve soil health. To make the most of these benefits, Iowa no-till farmer Will Cannon focuses on the biology of the soil – instead of the chemistry of farming.
·farmers.gov·
Focus on Biology Pushes Soil Health and No-Till System to Next Level | Farmers.gov
Same Old Conservation Ideas, Just New Words to Describe Them | No-Till Farmer
Same Old Conservation Ideas, Just New Words to Describe Them | No-Till Farmer
...maybe it’s time to come up with a new look and terminology for marketing some of our older, more successful farming practices, such as those that deal with soil erosion and conservation. “There is a pervasive belief that we know all there is to know about soil erosion and soil conservation,” he says.
·no-tillfarmer.com·
Same Old Conservation Ideas, Just New Words to Describe Them | No-Till Farmer
Healthy soil, healthy farms | Morning Ag Clips
Healthy soil, healthy farms | Morning Ag Clips
Soil health depends on a complex group of microbes. These bacteria and fungi recycle nutrients and prepare the soils to better support plants.
·morningagclips.com·
Healthy soil, healthy farms | Morning Ag Clips
There is a fungus among us! – Soils Matter, Get the Scoop!
There is a fungus among us! – Soils Matter, Get the Scoop!
For over four hundred million years, arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi have been forming symbiotic relationships with plants around the globe. Found on almost every continent and in approximately 80% of vascular plants, these important fungi play a pivotal role in plant nutrient uptake in diverse ecosystems.
·soilsmatter.wordpress.com·
There is a fungus among us! – Soils Matter, Get the Scoop!
How Wildfire Affects the Forest Soil - Clackamas SWCD
How Wildfire Affects the Forest Soil - Clackamas SWCD
Did you know that wildfire can affect forest soils? The effect of fire on trees, shrubs, and herbaceous (non-woody) plants are easily visible. It is not so easy, however, to see the effect wildfire has on the forest soil. There is more under your feet than what you see with the naked eye. Whole communities of organisms live in the soil contributing to the health of the forest itself.
·conservationdistrict.org·
How Wildfire Affects the Forest Soil - Clackamas SWCD
What if a brand new field of science could explain how wildfire smoke carries microbes? | Local News | Spokane | The Pacific Northwest Inlander | News, Politics, Music, Calendar, Events in Spokane, Coeur d'Alene and the Inland Northwest
What if a brand new field of science could explain how wildfire smoke carries microbes? | Local News | Spokane | The Pacific Northwest Inlander | News, Politics, Music, Calendar, Events in Spokane, Coeur d'Alene and the Inland Northwest
When wildfires rage across the landscape, whether on grasslands or in forests, the massive plumes of smoke that rise into the air and travel for miles can carry more than a thousand different types of microbes with them. Yet until University of Idaho associate professor Leda Kobziar came along, there was essentially no research on what bacteria and fungi might be carried in that smoke, how far those microbes might travel, or how they might impact soil ecology both where the fire started and where the microbes land.
·inlander.com·
What if a brand new field of science could explain how wildfire smoke carries microbes? | Local News | Spokane | The Pacific Northwest Inlander | News, Politics, Music, Calendar, Events in Spokane, Coeur d'Alene and the Inland Northwest
Subterranean Clover: A Successful Cover Crop for Local Hazelnut Orchardist - Clackamas SWCD
Subterranean Clover: A Successful Cover Crop for Local Hazelnut Orchardist - Clackamas SWCD
In 2017, he tried subterranean clover in his NE field. Subterranean clover is a cool-season annual legume that produces seeds during the summer at or below the soil surface (hence the name subterranean). Seeds then germinate in the fall after the first rains and grow rapidly through the fall/early winter. It may go dormant for a time during the winter, but becomes active again in early spring. It grows in densely matted clumps that are 6-15 inches tall. The clover spreads through rootless runners reaching up to 3 feet in length. After a few years of trial, Fred reports that the “Subclover cover crop, in what is now our nine-year-old hazelnut orchard, is working very well and is quite easy to manage. Plus, now as the trees have sent roots out in the row centers, we are getting some nitrogen benefits. This orchard was visibly greener than our other orchards last spring. Every year it [the cover crop] gets better without having to add any seed since it is self-seeding.”
·conservationdistrict.org·
Subterranean Clover: A Successful Cover Crop for Local Hazelnut Orchardist - Clackamas SWCD
Pesticides Are Killing the World's Soils - Scientific American
Pesticides Are Killing the World's Soils - Scientific American
But beneath fields covered in tightly knit rows of corn, soybeans, wheat and other monoculture crops, a toxic soup of insecticides, herbicides and fungicides is wreaking havoc, according to our newly published analysis in the journal Frontiers in Environmental Science. The study, the most comprehensive review ever conducted on how pesticides affect soil health, should trigger immediate and substantive changes in how regulatory agencies like the EPA assess the risks posed by the nearly 850 pesticide ingredients approved for use in the U.S.
·scientificamerican.com·
Pesticides Are Killing the World's Soils - Scientific American
How does wind erosion affect farming in Washington state? | Morning Ag Clips
How does wind erosion affect farming in Washington state? | Morning Ag Clips
The May 7th, 2021 Sustainable, Secure Food Blog explores how wind erosion affects farming in Washington and some solutions farmers can use. According to blogger Andrew McGuire, “Wind erosion is a soil health thief. In both sandy and fine-grained silt soils of Eastern Washington, wind erosion lifts, sifts, and then carries away the best part of the soil. Lost are the tiny particles of clay and silt with the organic matter that is stuck to them.” Local soil conditions make matters worse. Low rainfall produces sparse vegetation, therefore low soil organic matter levels.
·morningagclips.com·
How does wind erosion affect farming in Washington state? | Morning Ag Clips
How Does Soil Health Impact Farm Management Decisions? – PNW AG Network
How Does Soil Health Impact Farm Management Decisions? – PNW AG Network
“Soil Health is, simply put, the ability to produce marketable outputs with minimal inputs. It’s very important for people to understand that multi-dimensional property is dynamic, it changes over time and it’s dependent on environmental conditions like temperature, moisture and even the microorganisms and worms and all other life that’s present there.”
·pnwag.net·
How Does Soil Health Impact Farm Management Decisions? – PNW AG Network
The template for climate mitigation is soil conservation, says farm-enviro alliance | Successful Farming
The template for climate mitigation is soil conservation, says farm-enviro alliance | Successful Farming
The new era of climate mitigation on the farm would look like a beefed-up version of longstanding USDA conservation programs, augmented by a carbon bank that sets a floor price for carbon sequestration and reductions in greenhouse gas emissions, said leaders of the Food and Agriculture Climate Alliance (FACA) on Wednesday. “That’s what we’ve modeled it after,” said Chuck Connor, a founding member of the alliance and a former deputy agriculture secretary.
·agriculture.com·
The template for climate mitigation is soil conservation, says farm-enviro alliance | Successful Farming
U.S. Farmers and Ranchers in Action promotes agriculture's potential as a climate solution | Successful Farming
U.S. Farmers and Ranchers in Action promotes agriculture's potential as a climate solution | Successful Farming
U.S. Farmers & Ranchers in Action (USFRA) —in conjunction with World Business Council for Sustainable Development (WBCSD), The Mixing Bowl, and Croatan Institute has issued a new report that analyzes the state of soil health technology. The report also identifies opportunities to find new sources of capital to scale up the adoption of climate-smart agriculture on U.S. farms and ranches.
·agriculture.com·
U.S. Farmers and Ranchers in Action promotes agriculture's potential as a climate solution | Successful Farming