Ngom
- AfSIS
- Haplic Podzols: 52%
- Fibric Histosols: 19%
- Haplic Arenosols: 13%
- Dystric Regosols: 5%
- Dystric Cambisols: 3%
- Techniques
Soil properties (estimated): Orsa, Sweden
- Texture
- pH
- Bulk density
- Organic carbon
- CEC
Challenges
- Sandy loam has good drainage but has difficulty holding nutrients, which can get washed away in rainfall or irrigation
- low water retention rates
Cwiny wii
- Can be treated with sulfur if too alkaline
- Compensate for lower water retention rates
- Spray with very weak sulphate of iron if excess manganese prevents response to sulfur or iron
- Fertilizers may be required, especially nitrogen and potassium
- Nitrogen is essential for healthy plant growth, but can reduce flowering response
- For growing groundnuts (peanuts) in sandy loam, it is important to maintain near to neutral soil pH levels and Ca:K ratios lower than 3
Lok mukaro angwec
- Sandy loam soil is a desirable soil type for growing many plants
- Varies from very fine loam to very coarse
Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
- Many plant species are adapted to acidic or alkaline soils
- The availability of many plant nutrients (for example, P), non-essential elements (for example, Al, Cd, Pb), and essential trace elements (for example, Mn, Fe, Cu, Zn) is strongly dependent on soil pH (Miller and Gardiner 2001)
- Generally, metal cations (for example, Mn, Fe, Ni, Cu, Zn, Cd, Pb) become more available as pH decreases, while oxyanions (for example, SO4) become more available at alkaline pH levels
- Soil pH is strongly dependent on the chemical weathering environment. Soils in hot, humid areas and even mesic, wetter areas tend to be more acidic than those of much drier areas. Vegetation communities in those areas tend to be adapted to the soil conditions in which they developed
Challenges
- Reduce moderate soil porosity and soil compaction for optimal plant growth
- As density increases, pore space decreases and the amount of air and water held in the soil also decreases
- Compaction causes shallow plant rooting, poor plant growth, reduced crop yield, and reduced vegetative cover, and therefore, increased erosion
- Soil compaction to restrict water movement through the soil profile is beneficial under arid conditions, but under humid conditions compaction decreases yields
Cwiny wii
- Decrease soil disturbance
- increase soil organic matter
- Use cover crops, crop residues, perennial sod, and reduced tillage to increase soil organic matter, decrease disturbance, and reduced bulk density
- Use multi-crop systems involving plants with different rooting depths to help break up compacted soil layers
- Do not plow or disk to the same depth
- Do not allow equipment traffic on wet soil
- Do not burn or remove crop residue
- Rotate crops with varying root structure and root depth
- Do not overgraze forage plants
- To reduce high bulk density and compaction, minimize soil disturbance and production activities when soils are wet, use designated field roads or rows for equipment traffic, reduce the number of trips across the area, and maintain or increase soil organic matter
- Use grazing systems that minimize livestock traffic and loafing, provide protected heavy use areas, and adhere to recommended minimum grazing heights
- Use conservation crop rotation, cover crop, deep tillage, prescribed grazing residue, and tillage management
- Avoid plowing, timber harvesting, or compaction of the soil
Lok mukaro angwec
- Soil bulk density may indicate soil compaction but is dependent on many soil factors including particle size distribution, soil organic matter content, and coarse fragment content
- Bulk density increases as the sand and rock content increases
- Bulk density decreases as the organic matter content increases
- A mineral soil with “ideal” physical properties has 50 percent solids and 50 percent pore space occupying a given volume of space
- At optimal water content, half the pore space is filled with water (such a soil will have a bulk density of 1.33 g/cm3)
- Roots usually grow well in soils with bulk densities of up to 1.4 g/cm3
- Root penetration begins to decline significantly at bulk densities above 1.7 g/cm3
- Above 1.5 g/cm3, there is an increasing probability of adverse effects from soil compaction or high rock content
- Coarse fragments—Soils with a coarse fragment content of > 50 percent to have a greater probability of adverse effects from infiltration rates that are too high, water storage capacity that is too low, more difficult root penetration, and greater difficulty in seed germination and seedling growth
- A high contents of coarse fragments can limit soil productivity
Challenges
- Difficult to raise organic matter content of well-aerated soils (coarse sands, soils in warm-hot and arid regions) because the added materials decompose rapidly
- Soil organic matter levels can be maintained with less organic residue in fine-textured soils in cold temperate and moist-wet regions with restricted aeration
- Total organic carbon in mineral soils (percent): 1 to 5 = adequate levels,
- < 1 = could indicate possible loss of organic C from erosion or other processes, particularly in temperate or colder areas
Cwiny wii
- Increase the organic matter content by returning organic materials to soils and adding rotations with high-residue crops and deep- or dense-rooting crops
- Ways to increase organic matter contents of soils: compost, cover crops/green manure crops, crop rotation, perennial forage crops, zero or reduced tillage, agroforestry
Lok mukaro angwec
- Organic Carbon is, together with pH, the best simple indicator of the health status of the soil
- Soils with very high amounts of organic carbon are generally nutrient-rich, fertile soils with a good structure
- Very high soil organic carbon (SOC) can be an indicator of good crop yields
- Total organic carbon in mineral soils (percent): 1 to 5 = adequate levels,
- > 5 = excellent buildup of organic C with all associated benefits
- Moderate to high soil organic carbon (SOC) in the soil is an indicator of high crop yields
- Moderate to high amounts of organic carbon are associated with fertile soils with a good structure
Challenges
- Low CEC soils are more likely to develop potassium and magnesium (and other cation) deficiencies, while high CEC soils are less susceptible to leaching losses of these cations
- For sandy soils, the addition of a large amount of potassium at one time can lead to high losses due to leaching. This is because the potassium adds a large amount of cations at one time and soil cannot hold on to the excess potassium. Therefore, frequent additions of smaller amounts of potassium can work better to add potassium to the soil than one large amount
Cwiny wii
- The lower the CEC, the faster the soil pH will decrease with time
- Sandy soils require more frequent liming than clay soils
- The higher the CEC, the larger the quantity of lime that must be added to increase the soil pH
- Sandy soils need less lime than clay soils to increase the pH to desired levels
- The higher the CEC, the larger the quantities of soil additives the soil will need to change soil pH, either when increasing pH with lime or high bicarbonate irrigation water, or when decreasing pH with nitrogen fertilizers or elemental sulfur.. Acceptable saturation ranges for Soil CEC = 6-10: 3-5% K, 50-70% Ca, 8-20% Mg
Lok mukaro angwec
- A Cation Exchange Capacity (CEC) of 4 to 10 cmol/kg in the soil organic matter (SOM) indicates a low CEC
- low organic matter
- low capability to hold important nutrients, such as calcium, magnesium, potassium and sodium
Kare | Depth | Wang otul | Texture Reaction - pH | Organic Carbon Conductivity - Electrical | Subsoil Cation Exchange | Clay Cation Exchange | Calcium Carbonate - Lime | Gypsum Sodium - Exchangeable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topsoil | 4 | 4.5 | 5.27 | 28 | 89 | 0 | 0 | |
Subsoil | 4 | 4.5 | 0.81 | 8 | 55 | 0 | 0 |
Soil Triangle - Haplic Podzols
Images - Haplic Podzols



Tee lok - Haplic Podzols
- Podzols (also known as podsols or Spodosols) are the typical soils of coniferous, or boreal forests. They are also the typical soils of eucalypt forests and heathlands in southern Australia. Haplic indicates that the major part of the upper 0.5 m of the soil profile is whole coloured. The eluviated soil, which is usually 4-8 cm thick, is low in Fe and Al oxides and humus. It is formed under moist, cool and acidic conditions, especially where the parent material, such as granite or sandstone, is rich in quartz. It is found under a layer of organic material in the process of decomposition, which is usually 5-10 cm thick. In the middle, there is often a thin layer of 0.5 to 1 cm. The bleached soil goes over into a red or redbrown horizon called rusty soil. The colour is strongest in the upper part, and change at a depth of 50 to 100 cm progressively to the part of the soil that is mainly not affected by processes; that is the parent material. Podzols are found in areas that are wet and cold (for example in Northern Ontario or Russia) and also in warm areas such as Florida where sandy soils have fluctuating water tables (humic variant of the northern podzol or Humod). An example of a warm-climate podzol is the Myakka fine sand, state soil of Florida. In Western Europe podzols are developed on heathland, which is a construct of human interference, whereby the vegetation is maintained through grazing and burning. In some British moorlands with podzolic soils there are brown earths preserved under Bronze Age barrows. Most podzols are poor soils for agriculture. Some of them are sandy and excessively drained. Others have shallow rooting zones and poor drainage due to subsoil cementation. Well-drained loamy types can be very productive for crops if lime and fertilizer are used. In the Western Cape region of South Africa, deeper rooted orchards and vineyards suffer fewer trace element deficiencies than do shallow-rooted vegetable crops. Most zonal Podzols are under forest; intrazonal Podzols in temperate regions are mostly under forest or shrubs (heath). Tropical Podzols normally sustain a light forest that recovers only slowly after cutting or burning. Mature Podzols are generally best used for extensive grazing or left idle under their natural (climax) vegetation
Tyen Lok - Ngom mamiyo
- Loams are the most useful "all around" soils; they combine the lightness and earliness of the sands, with the strength and retentiveness of the clays. Loams contain from 40 to 60 per cent, of sand, and 15 to 25 per cent, of clay. They "work up" easily, do not crust or crack, are well supplied with plant food, and, what is chiefly important, water moves through them freely and still they are not leachy. Practically all farm crops grow satisfactorily on a loam. It is especially suitable for potatoes, corn, market-gardening crops, and small fruits; but grasses, cereals, clover, alfalfa, and cotton, find it congenial. It requires no special treatment, except such attention to good tillage, drainage, and the addition of humus as is a necessary part of the best farm practice everywhere. It doesn't matter if peppers are grown in temperate, tropical or subtropical climates as long as they have a relatively dry season, so a good loam that drains well helps to offset a wetter climate. Most fruit trees live longer and produce better when they grow in balanced loam. Citrus trees like good drainage, but they need to be kept moist. Loam is a good choice for citrus
Metrics/Discussion
Wii Lok | Pire tek | Pete tere |
---|---|---|
Wang otul | 4 | Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reference depth | 100 mm | ChallengesTee lok
|
Base saturation | 11Ikum mia | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 - Lime | 0% Peke | Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Organic carbon | 5.27% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Kwoyo | 89 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Ngom | 28 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 10% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Gravel - Iwi miacel - Dwone | 15% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wiiTee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 50% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo mawoko - Iwi miacel - Peke | 40% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Electrical conductivity | 0.1 dS/m | ChallengesCwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Gypsum content CaSO4 | 0% Dwone | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reaction - pH | 4.5 -log H+ | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Exchangeable sodium | 1Ikum mia | Tee lok
|
Reference bulk density | 1.41 kg/dm3 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Nitrogen (N) | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
| |
Phosphorus (P) | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
| |
Potassium (K) | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
|
Kare | Depth | Wang otul | Texture Reaction - pH | Organic Carbon Conductivity - Electrical | Subsoil Cation Exchange | Clay Cation Exchange | Calcium Carbonate - Lime | Gypsum Sodium - Exchangeable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topsoil | 1 | 4.3 | 33.63 | 77 | 45 | 0 | 0 | |
Subsoil | 1 | 4.3 | 32.89 | 78 | 71 | 0 | 0 |
Soil Triangle - Fibric Histosols
Tee lok - Fibric Histosols
- In both the FAO soil classification and the USA soil taxonomy, a histosol is a soil consisting primarily of organic materials. They are defined as having 40 centimetres (16 in) or more of organic soil material in the upper 80 centimetres (31 in). Organic soil material has an organic carbon content (by weight) of 12 to 18 percent, or more, depending on the clay content of the soil. Fibric indicates having more than two-thirds (by volume) of the organic soil material consisting of recognisable plant tissue. Aquic conditions or artificial drainage are required. Typically, histosols have very low bulk density and are poorly drained because the organic matter holds water very well. Most are acidic and many are very deficient in major plant nutrients which are washed away in the consistently moist soil. Fibric histosols are a type of peat. In Australia, histosols are called organosols. Histosols form whenever organic matter forms at a more rapid rate than it is destroyed. This occurs because of restricted drainage precluding aerobic decomposition, and the remains of plants and animals remain within the soil. Thus, histosols are very important ecologically because they, and gelisols, store large quantities of organic carbon. If accumulation continues for a long enough period, coal forms. Most histosols occur in Canada, Scandinavia, the West Siberian Plain, Sumatra, Borneo and New Guinea. Smaller areas are found in other parts of Europe, the Russian Far East (chiefly in Khabarovsk Krai and Amur Oblast), Florida and other areas of permanent swampland. Fossil histosols are known from the earliest extensive land vegetation in the Devonian. Histosols are generally very difficult to cultivate because of the poor drainage and often low chemical fertility. However, histosols formed on very recent glacial lands can often be very productive when drained and produce high-grade pasture for dairying or beef cattle. They can sometimes be used for fruit if carefully managed, but there is a great risk of the organic matter becoming drypowder and eroding under the influence of drying winds. A tendency towards shrinkage and compaction is also evident with crops
Tyen Lok - Kwoyo - Lengo
- Clay contains 40% or more clay, less than 45% sand, and less than 40% silt. Clay drains poorly, has few air spaces, warms slowly in spring, and is heavy to cultivate. If drainage is improved, plants grow well as it holds more nutrients than many other soils. Extreme caution should be used in plowing and tilling clay soils. If plowed when too wet they become cloddy. There is a certain point between wetness and dryness when a clay soil crumbles quite readily; it should be tilled only at this time, so far as is possible. The texture of a clay soil may be ruined for several years by one injudicious plowing, when it was too wet. Unless the soil is very tenacious, and "runs together" or "puddles" if left bare over winter, clay land may be fall-plowed to advantage, leaving it rough and exposed to the mellowing action of freezing and thawing. The crust that forms so easily over the surface of clay soil in summer should be prevented by frequent shallow tillage. Something may also be done to improve the texture of clay soils, in certain cases, by liming them. This causes many of the fine grains to stick together, forming larger grains, thereby making the soil looser and more porous. The farm crops that succeed most generally on clay soils are the cereals, grasses and some tree fruits. Clay land is especially valuable for hay. The fine particles of clay may be separated from each other and the soil loosened and lightened by mixing them with particles of humus or sand. It is rarely practicable to haul sand upon a clay soil and plow it under, because of the expense, but if this can be done expediently the result will be gratifying
Metrics/Discussion
Wii Lok | Pire tek | Pete tere |
---|---|---|
Wang otul | 1 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reference depth | 100 mm | ChallengesTee lok
|
Base saturation | 62Ikum mia | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 - Lime | 0% Peke | Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Organic carbon | 33.63% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Kwoyo | 45 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Ngom | 77 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 40% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Gravel - Iwi miacel - Dwone | 1% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wiiTee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 20% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo mawoko - Iwi miacel - Peke | 40% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Electrical conductivity | 0.1 dS/m | ChallengesCwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Gypsum content CaSO4 | 0% Dwone | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reaction - pH | 4.3 -log H+ | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Exchangeable sodium | 2Ikum mia | Challenges
Tee lok
|
Reference bulk density | 0.1 kg/dm3 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Nitrogen (N) | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
| |
Phosphorus (P) | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
| |
Potassium (K) | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
|
Kare | Depth | Wang otul | Texture Reaction - pH | Organic Carbon Conductivity - Electrical | Subsoil Cation Exchange | Clay Cation Exchange | Calcium Carbonate - Lime | Gypsum Sodium - Exchangeable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topsoil | 6 | 6.2 | 0.4 | 3 | 35 | 0 | 0 | |
Subsoil | 6 | 6.2 | 0.21 | 2 | 39 | 0 | 0 |
Soil Triangle - Haplic Arenosols
Tee lok - Haplic Arenosols
- Arenosols comprise sandy soils, including both soils developed in residual sands after in situ weathering of usually quartz-rich sediments or rock, and soils developed in recently deposited sands such as dunes in deserts and beach lands. Corresponding soils in other classification systems include Psamments of the US Soil Taxonomy and the sols minéraux bruts and sols peu 72 évolués in the French classification system of the CPCS (1967). Many Arenosols belong to Arenic Rudosols (Australia), Psammozems (Russian Federation) and Neossolos (Brazil). Haplic indicates that the major part of the upper 0.5 m of the soil profile is whole coloured. Vast expanses of deep aeolian sands are found on the Central African plateau between the equator and 30 °S. These Kalahari Sands form the largest body of sands on Earth. Other areas of Arenosols occur in the Sahelian region of Africa, various parts of the Sahara, central and western Australia, the Near East, and China. Sandy coastal plains and coastal dune areas are of smaller geographic extent. Although most Arenosols occur in arid and semi-arid regions, they are typical azonal soils; they are found in the widest possible range of climates, from very arid to very humid and from cold to hot. Arenosols are widespread in aeolian landscapes but occur also in marine, littoral, and lacustrine sands and in coarse-grained weathering mantles of siliceous rocks, mainly sandstone, quartzite and granite. There is no limitation as to age or period in which soil formation took place. Arenosols occur on very old surfaces as well as in very recent landforms, and may be associated with almost any type of vegetation. Arenosols occur in widely different environments, and possibilities to use them for agriculture vary accordingly. The characteristic that all Arenosols have in common is their coarse texture, accounting for their generally high permeability and low water and nutrient storage capacity. On the other hand, Arenosols offer ease of cultivation, rooting and harvesting of root and tuber crops. Arenosols in arid lands, where the annual rainfall is less than 300 mm, are predominantly used for extensive (nomadic) grazing. Dry farming is possible where the annual rainfall exceeds 300 mm. Low coherence, low nutrient storage capacity and high sensitivity to erosion are serious limitations of Arenosols in the dry zone. Good yields of small grains, melons, pulses and fodder crops have been realized on irrigated Arenosols, but high percolation losses may make surface irrigation impracticable. Drip or trickle irrigation, possibly combined with careful dosage of fertilizers, may remedy the situation. Many areas with Arenosols in the Sahelian zone (annual rainfall of 300–600 mm) are transitional to the Sahara, and their soils are covered with sparse vegetation. Uncontrolled grazing and clearing for cultivation without appropriate soil conservation measures can easily make these soils unstable and revert them to shifting dunes. Arenosols in the humid and subhumid temperate zone have similar limitations as those of the dry zone, albeit that drought is a less serious constraint. In some instances, e.g. in horticulture, the low water storage of Arenosols is considered advantageous because the soils warm up early in the season. In mixed farming systems (which are much more common) with cereals, fodder crops and grassland, supplemental sprinkler irrigation is applied during dry spells. A large part of the Arenosols of the temperate zone is under forest, either production forest or natural stands in carefully managed nature reserves. In places, Arenosols have been planted to perennial crops such as rubber and pepper; coastal sands are widely planted to estate crops such as coconut, cashew, casuarinas and pine, especially where good quality groundwater is within reach of the root system. Root and tuber crops benefit from the ease of harvesting, notably cassava, with its tolerance of low nutrient levels. Groundnut and bambara groundnut can be found on the better soils. Arenosols and related soils with a sandy surface texture in some regions (e.g. west Australia and parts of South Africa) may be prone to develop water-repellency, typically caused by hydrophobic exudates of soil fungi that coat sand grains. Water-repellency is most intense after lengthy spells of hot, dry weather and leads to differential water infiltration. This is thought to have ecological significance in promoting plant species diversity (e.g. in Namaqualand). Wetting agents (surfactants such as calcium lignosulphonate) are sometimes used to achieve more uniform water penetration under irrigation. Dryland wheat farmers in Australia mine clay and apply it to their sandy soils with specialized machinery. The results (more uniform germination and better herbicide efficiency) can be economically attractive where a local source of clay is available
Tyen Lok - Kwoyo
- Sand is free-draining soil, gritty to the touch, warms up quickly in spring, easy to cultivate, dries out rapidly, and may lack nutrients, which are easily washed through the soil in wet weather (often called a "hungry" soil)
Metrics/Discussion
Wii Lok | Pire tek | Pete tere |
---|---|---|
Wang otul | 6 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reference depth | 100 mm | ChallengesTee lok
|
Base saturation | 93Ikum mia | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 - Lime | 0% Peke | Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Organic carbon | 0.4% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Kwoyo | 35 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Ngom | 3 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 5% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Gravel - Iwi miacel - Dwone | 4% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wiiTee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 90% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo mawoko - Iwi miacel - Peke | 5% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Electrical conductivity | 0.1 dS/m | ChallengesCwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Gypsum content CaSO4 | 0% Dwone | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reaction - pH | 6.2 -log H+ | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Exchangeable sodium | 3Ikum mia | Challenges
Tee lok
|
Reference bulk density | 1.49 kg/dm3 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Nitrogen (N) | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
| |
Phosphorus (P) | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
| |
Potassium (K) | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
|
Kare | Depth | Wang otul | Texture Reaction - pH | Organic Carbon Conductivity - Electrical | Subsoil Cation Exchange | Clay Cation Exchange | Calcium Carbonate - Lime | Gypsum Sodium - Exchangeable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topsoil | 4 | 5.1 | 1.39 | 11 | 23 | 0 | 0 | |
Subsoil | 4 | 5.1 | 0.6 | 6 | 28 | 0 | 0 |
Soil Triangle - Dystric Regosols
Images - Dystric Regosols


Tee lok - Dystric Regosols
- A Regosol in the FAO World Reference Base for Soil Resources is very weakly developed mineral soil in unconsolidated materials. The great variation among Regosols makes it virtually impossible to give a generalised account of Regosol characteristics. The central concept of a Regosol is a deep, well-drained, medium-textured, non-differentiated mineral soil that has minimal expression of diagnostic horizons (other than an ochric surface horizon), properties or materials. Dystric indicates having a base saturation (by 1 M NH4OAc) of less than 50 percent in the major part between 20 and 100 cm from the soil surface or between 20 cm and continuous rock or a cemented or indurated layer. Regosols occur in all climate zones without permafrost and at all elevations. Regosols are particularly common in arid areas, in the dry tropics and in mountain regions. Internationally, Regosols correlate with soil taxa that are marked by incipient soil formation such as Entisols in the USDA soil taxonomy or skeletal soils in the Australian soil classification. Regosols cover an estimated 260 million hectares worldwide, mainly in arid areas in the mid-western USA, Northern Africa, the Near East and Australia. Some 50 million hectares of Regosols occur in the dry tropics and another 36 million hectares in mountain areas. Land use and management of Regosols vary widely. Some Regosols are used for capital-intensive irrigated farming but the most common land use is low volume grazing. Regosols on colluvial deposits in the loess belt of northern Europe and North America are mostly cultivated; they are planted to small grains, sugar beet and fruit trees. Regosols in mountainous regions are delicate and best left under forest
Tyen Lok - Ngom mamiyo
- Loams are the most useful "all around" soils; they combine the lightness and earliness of the sands, with the strength and retentiveness of the clays. Loams contain from 40 to 60 per cent, of sand, and 15 to 25 per cent, of clay. They "work up" easily, do not crust or crack, are well supplied with plant food, and, what is chiefly important, water moves through them freely and still they are not leachy. Practically all farm crops grow satisfactorily on a loam. It is especially suitable for potatoes, corn, market-gardening crops, and small fruits; but grasses, cereals, clover, alfalfa, and cotton, find it congenial. It requires no special treatment, except such attention to good tillage, drainage, and the addition of humus as is a necessary part of the best farm practice everywhere. It doesn't matter if peppers are grown in temperate, tropical or subtropical climates as long as they have a relatively dry season, so a good loam that drains well helps to offset a wetter climate. Most fruit trees live longer and produce better when they grow in balanced loam. Citrus trees like good drainage, but they need to be kept moist. Loam is a good choice for citrus
Jami Apura - Dystric Regosols
- capital-intensive irrigated farming
- small grains, sugar beet
- fruit trees (on colluvial deposits in the loess belt of northern Europe and North America)
Metrics/Discussion
Wii Lok | Pire tek | Pete tere |
---|---|---|
Wang otul | 4 | Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reference depth | 100 mm | ChallengesTee lok
|
Base saturation | 24Ikum mia | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 - Lime | 0% Peke | Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Organic carbon | 1.39% Peke | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Kwoyo | 23 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Ngom | 11 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 21% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Gravel - Iwi miacel - Dwone | 19% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wiiTee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 42% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo mawoko - Iwi miacel - Peke | 37% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Electrical conductivity | 0.1 dS/m | ChallengesCwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Gypsum content CaSO4 | 0% Dwone | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reaction - pH | 5.1 -log H+ | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Exchangeable sodium | 1Ikum mia | Tee lok
|
Reference bulk density | 1.33 kg/dm3 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Nitrogen (N) | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
| |
Phosphorus (P) | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
| |
Potassium (K) | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
|
Kare | Depth | Wang otul | Texture Reaction - pH | Organic Carbon Conductivity - Electrical | Subsoil Cation Exchange | Clay Cation Exchange | Calcium Carbonate - Lime | Gypsum Sodium - Exchangeable |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Topsoil | 4 | 5.1 | 1.45 | 12 | 32 | 0 | 0 | |
Subsoil | 4 | 5.1 | 0.5 | 9 | 35 | 0 | 0 |
Soil Triangle - Dystric Cambisols
Images - Dystric Cambisols






Tee lok - Dystric Cambisols
- Cambisols combine soils with at least an incipient subsurface soil formation. Transformation of parent material is evident from structure formation and mostly brownish discoloration, increasing clay percentage, and/or carbonate removal. Other soil classification systems refer to many Cambisols as: Braunerden (Germany), Sols bruns (France), Brown soils/Brown Forest soils (older US systems), or Burozems (Russian Federation). FAO coined the name Cambisols, adopted by Brazil (Cambissolos); US Soil Taxonomy classifies most of these soils as Inceptisols. Cambisols contain medium and fine-textured materials derived from a wide range of rocks. Cambisols are characterized by slight or moderate weathering of parent material and by absence of appreciable quantities of illuviated clay, organic matter, Al and/or Fe compounds. Dystric indicates having a base saturation (by 1 M NH4OAc) of less than 50 percent in the major part between 20 and 100 cm from the soil surface or between 20 cm and continuous rock or a cemented or indurated layer. Cambisols can be found in level to mountainous terrain in all climates; wide range of vegetation types. Cambisols cover an estimated 1 500 million ha worldwide. Cambisols are particularly well represented in temperate and boreal regions that were under the influence of glaciations during the Pleistocene, partly because the parent material of the soil is still young, but also because soil formation is slow in cool regions. Erosion and deposition cycles explain the occurrence of Cambisols in mountain regions. Cambisols also occur in dry regions but are less common in the humid tropics and subtropics where weathering and soil formation proceed at much faster rates than in temperate, boreal and dry regions. The young alluvial plains and terraces of the Ganges–Brahmaputra system are probably the largest continuous surface of Cambisols in the tropics. Cambisols are also common in areas with active geologic erosion, where they may occur in association with mature tropical soils. By and large, Cambisols make good agricultural land and are intensively used. The Dystric Cambisols, though less fertile than Eutric Cambisols, are used for (mixed) arable farming and as grazing land. Cambisols on steep slopes are best kept under forest; this is particularly true for Cambisols in highlands. Dystric and Ferralic Cambisols in the humid tropics are poor in nutrients but still richer than associated Acrisols or Ferralsols and they have a greater cation exchange capacity
Tyen Lok - Ngom mamiyo
- Loams are the most useful "all around" soils; they combine the lightness and earliness of the sands, with the strength and retentiveness of the clays. Loams contain from 40 to 60 per cent, of sand, and 15 to 25 per cent, of clay. They "work up" easily, do not crust or crack, are well supplied with plant food, and, what is chiefly important, water moves through them freely and still they are not leachy. Practically all farm crops grow satisfactorily on a loam. It is especially suitable for potatoes, corn, market-gardening crops, and small fruits; but grasses, cereals, clover, alfalfa, and cotton, find it congenial. It requires no special treatment, except such attention to good tillage, drainage, and the addition of humus as is a necessary part of the best farm practice everywhere. It doesn't matter if peppers are grown in temperate, tropical or subtropical climates as long as they have a relatively dry season, so a good loam that drains well helps to offset a wetter climate. Most fruit trees live longer and produce better when they grow in balanced loam. Citrus trees like good drainage, but they need to be kept moist. Loam is a good choice for citrus
Metrics/Discussion
Wii Lok | Pire tek | Pete tere |
---|---|---|
Wang otul | 4 | Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reference depth | 100 mm | ChallengesTee lok
|
Base saturation | 38Ikum mia | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Calcium carbonate CaCO3 - Lime | 0% Peke | Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Organic carbon | 1.45% Peke | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Kwoyo | 32 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Cation exchange capacity - Ngom | 12 cmol/kg | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 20% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwecTee lok
|
Gravel - Iwi miacel - Dwone | 10% Peke | ChallengesCwiny wiiTee lok
|
Kwoyo - Iwi miacel - Peke | 42% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Kwoyo mawoko - Iwi miacel - Peke | 38% Peke | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Electrical conductivity | 0.1 dS/m | ChallengesCwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Gypsum content CaSO4 | 0% Dwone | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Soil reaction - pH | 5.1 -log H+ | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Exchangeable sodium | 2Ikum mia | Challenges
Tee lok
|
Reference bulk density | 1.3 kg/dm3 | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
Tee lok
|
Nitrogen (N) | ChallengesCwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
| |
Phosphorus (P) | Challenges
Cwiny wiiLok mukaro angwec
| |
Potassium (K) | Cwiny wii
Lok mukaro angwec
|
Zero Tillage
Conservation tillage systems such as zero tillage cause minimum disturbance to the soil after the previous crop has been harvested. In zero tillage, the ideal is to plant direct into the soil, without hoeing or plowing. Tillage is reduced to ripping planting lines or making holes for planting with a hoe. Crop residues are left in the field to reduce soil erosion, conserve moisture, inhibit weed growth, and act as green manure. Zero tillage is not recommended when disease is present. To manage disease, crop residues must be either removed from the field and destroyed or deeply ploughed to reduce sources of disease infection and spread.
Advantages of conservation tillage include less machinery, labour and fuel, as well as reduced soil erosion and compaction. Disadvantages of conservation tillage include lower soil temperatures, slower germination and emergence when direct sowing is used, slower early growth, delayed competition with weeds, higher incidence of root diseases, heavier crop residue, the possibility of more difficult planter operation, weed spectrum changes, and potential increase of soil insect pests or insects that spend part of their life cycle in the soil (e.g. cutworms, thrips, leafmining flies, grubs). Cultivation exposes these pests to desiccation by the sun heat and to predation by natural enemies.
Green Manuring
Green manure legumes create nitrogen in the soil by fixing it from the atmosphere.
Benefits of Green Manure Cover Crops
- Easy to grow
- Increases soil organic matter
- Reduce soil losses from wind and water erosion
- If it is a legume, it can fix nitrogen. When the legume is mature, chopped up and added to the soil, it will add nitrogen to the soil which will be used by later crops on the land.
- The roots of the green manure crops extract nutrients from deep in the soil.
- The deep roots work to break up and aerate the soil
- When the green manure is added to the soil, it works to lighten and loosen the soil to aerate and improve drainage, making the soil healthier for later crops. After tilling in a green manure crop, we see the soil level in the farm beds raise several inches. The soil is loose and no longer compacted.
- Green manure crops include jack beans, perennial peanut, and Mucuna.
- These plants help the main crop by increasing soil fertility by adding nitrogen to the soil by nitrogen fixation.
- They add biomass (organic matter) to the soil.
- As cover crops, they reduce soil loss.
Planting Green Manure Crops
Green manure crops can be planting using intercropping with the main crop or by using crop rotation in which the green manure crop is planted in-between plantings of the main crop. For intercropping, plant the legume seeds in rows between rows of the main crop. Plow the legumes into the soil at the start of the rainy season.
In crop rotation, plant legumes after the main crop has been harvested. The legumes will benefit the field as a cover crop and as green manure. At full biomass maturity, plow the legumes into the soil as green manure for the next crop.
For a source of green manure to the field, cut the legumes at full maturity, shred, and spread over the field.
Preventing Soil Erosion while Adding Nutrients to the Soil
The first step in soil management is preventing the loss, or erosion, of soil. Topsoil is particularly vulnerable to erosion if not protected by plants or mulch or by other measures. The soil that remains after the loss of topsoil is usually less productive, which can result in lower yields. The challenge is to protect soil while using the land for food production and other non-food activities.
Soil erosion is caused mainly by wind and water but also by incorrect cultivation practices. Rain and wind dislodge and then carry away soil particles. Where the soil is bare or the vegetation poor, rainwater does not seep into the soil; instead it runs off and carries with it loose topsoil. Sloping land and light soils with low organic matter content are both prone to erosion. Once eroded, the soil is lost forever.
Soil erosion is a problem in regions with little vegetation, particularly in the semi-arid and arid zones. In the humid tropics, erosion was not considered a problem when the land was in its natural state, because the variety of native plants kept the soils covered at all times. Now, people are clearing more land for agricultural purposes, and the situation has changed. Heavy rains coupled with poor soil management of cultivated areas are now common causes of soil erosion in the humid areas.
Water Erosion
Some common forms of water erosion include:
- Sheet erosion: a thin top layer of soil is removed from the soil by the impact of rain. With sheet erosion, small heaps of loose material (e.g. grass) amass between fine lines of sand after a rainstorm. This erosion takes place across a whole garden or field.
- Rill erosion: water flows over minor depressions on the land's surface and cuts small channels into the soil. The erosion takes place along the length of these channels.
- Gully erosion: a gully forms along natural depressions on the soil's surface or on slopes. The head of a gully moves up the slope in the opposite direction of the flow of water. Gullies are symptoms of severe erosion.
Wind Erosion
This occurs mostly on light soils and bare land. High winds cause severe damage. Wind erosion is a common problem in dry and semi-arid areas, as well as in areas that get seasonal rains.
Unlike water which only erodes on slopes, wind can remove soil from flat land as well as from sloping land; it can also transport the soil particles through the air and deposit them far away. Soils vulnerable to wind erosion are dry, loose, light soils with little or no vegetative cover.
Plowing up and down a slope causes soil erosion. To prevent the loss of soils, certain measures must be taken.
These include:
- clearing only the land to be cultivated;
- planting along a contour and using grassed channels;
- establishing windbreaks and bench terraces;
- plowing along a contour;
- planting cover crops and mulching.
When clearing land for cultivation, the beneficial effects of certain trees and plants should be considered. Some trees should be left, since they may supply food, medicine, shade or, when they shed their leaves, organic matter.
Feeding the Soil
One of the main goals in growing crops is to make the soil fertile and well structured, so a wide range of useful crops can grow and produce well. In order to grow, plants require nutrients that are present in organic matter, such as nitrogen, calcium and phosphorus, as well as minerals and trace elements.
If the natural fertility or structure of the soil is poor, it must be continuously "fed" with organic matter, such as leaves and manure, in order to improve its productivity and water-holding capacity. As organic matter decomposes, it becomes food for plants. It also improves soil structure by loosening heavy clay and binding sandy soil.
Feeding the soil with organic matter is especially important in the early years of cultivating the land. Organic matter (i.e. waste from plants and livestock) can be collected and buried in the soil, where it will decompose. The organic matter also can be used to make compost, which can be applied to the soil to enrich its fertility.
The roots of legumes contain nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Therefore, intercropping or rotating legumes with other crops helps maintain or improve the nitrogen content of the soil, and this enhances the growth of other plants.
Healthy plants yield more and are better protected from insects and disease. The application of organic matter, such as compost, animal manure, green manure and soil from anthills, improves soil structure and adds nutrients to the soil.
Long-Term Soil Management
The ideal way to protect and feed the soil is to apply organic matter or compost regularly and to keep the soil covered with plants. A multilayer cropping system in which a mixture of trees and other plants with different maturity times are grown together will protect the soil and recycle nutrients. Leguminous plants such as cowpeas, groundnuts and beans are particularly useful in providing continuous nutrients for crops.
Apply Organic Matter to Soil to Improve the Crop
Plants can contain up to 90 percent water. The water is absorbed mainly through the root system of the plant. With the water, plant nutrients are absorbed. Healthy roots need air (aeration) for development. Excess water in the soil prevents air from penetrating and damages a plant's roots. Water management is therefore extremely important in regions with good water resources as well as in those where water is scarce.
The water-holding capacity of soil varies according to soil type. Soil with a high content of organic matter has better aeration, better structure and better water-holding capacity. Heavy, sticky soils are too dense to allow air in and water out, so roots cannot breathe and plants can have growth problems. When this kind of soil dries out, it sets like cement, and water takes a long time to soak into it. On the other hand, sandy, coarse-grained soils are too loose to hold water before it drains away. In this kind of soil, without a regular external water supply, a plant's roots cannot find enough water for growth. Regular application of organic matter will improve the ability of both these kinds of soil to hold and release enough water and air. During land preparation for planting, organic materials such as animal manure or compost should be applied to the land such that they are well incorporated into the soil.
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