Agri Kultuur November 2018 | Page 10

Table 1: Nutrients potentially available through CA and various soil ecosystem processes CA component and ecosystems services Above-ground biomass / crop residues (through microbial C transformation) 1 N (kg/ha) 168 P (kg/ha) 24 K (kg/ha) 249 (40% available for next crop = 70) (20% available for next crop in 1 st year = 5) (SA soils have sufficient K) 50 11 72 (20) 50 0 (2.2) 0 21 0 0 140 17 2380 28 40 1120 321 15 4815 Below-ground biomass of roots 2 SOM (2.5%; 20 kg N released per 1% SOM) Nutrient cycling through microbes (e.g. with high colonisation of AMF) 4 Nutrients available to next crop (kg/ha) Nutrient Costs (R/kg) Nutrient value (R/ha) 3 N fixed by legumes and available for next crop (10% legumes in mix) forms part of above- ground biomass 1 Nutrient cycling by cover crop roots forms part of root biomass value 2 P and K could also be added; values will increase with higher SOM levels 3 This value has a great potential to increase in future as microbial diversity and activity rise 4 The nutrients available to the next crop in the example illustrated in Table 1 are freely supplied by the soil ecosystem functions and services that have been influenced by the CA system; these nutrients are valued at R8315. This value will increase as CA practices are optimized, SOM have increased, and other soil ecosystem services have improved (such as soil microbial recycling of nutrients). To shorten the transformation period of restoring these functions (e.g. in a degraded soil), quality CA practices are needed that will speed-up the biological process and time. In wetter areas with clay soils this could take 3 to 5 years, but in warmer areas with sandy soils, it could take longer. In Part II of this article a case study from Ottosdal, North West Province will be described. AgriKultuur |AgriCulture References Jones, C., 2017. Light Farming: Five Principles for Soil Sequestration. Keynote address at the 5 th Annual No-till Conference, Victoria, Australia. Jones, D. L., Nguyen C. & Finlay, R. D., 2009. Carbon flow in the rhizosphere: carbon trading at the soil–root interface. Plant Soil 321, 5–33. Drinkwater, L.E. & Snapp, S.S., 2007. Nutrients in agroecosystems: Rethinking the management paradigm. Advances in Agronomy 92, 163–186. Hoorman, J. & Islam, R., 2010. Understanding soil microbes and nutrient recycling. Fact Sheet SAG-16-10, Ohio State University. 10