(9818099198) Call Girls In Noida Sector 14 (NOIDA ESCORTS)
Soil food web and its utility for ecology
1. SOIL FOOD WEB AND ITS UTILITY
FOR ECOLOGY
Presented by
Ishwar Prakash Sharma
2. Soil Ecology
Soil ecology is the study of interactions among soil
organisms.
The study of relationships between living organisms
and the environmental conditions in the soil in which
they live.
5. Soil Food Web
"An assemblage of populations of plants, animals, bacteria
and fungi that live in an environment and interact with one
another, forming together a distinctive living system with its
own composition, structure, environmental relations,
development and function" R. Whittaker (1975).
"A collection of organisms in an environment" J. Emlen
(1977).
"Organisms that interact in a given area" P. Price (1984).
"Associations of plants and animals that are spatially
delimited and that are dominated by one or more prominent
species or by a physical characterisitic" R. Ricklefs (1990).
"The species that occur together in space and time" Begon,
Harper, and Townsend (1996).
6. Characteristics of Healthy Soil Food Web
in Per Gram Soil
600 million bacterial individuals.
15,000 to 20,000 bacterial species.
150 to 300 meters of fungal biomass.
5,000 to 10,000 fungal species.
20,000 protozoa.
20 to 30 beneficial nematodes.
200,000 arthropods.
7. Healthy Soil Food Web System
Suppress disease.
Retain nutrients.
Nutrients available at rates as needed by plants.
Decompose toxins and heavy metals.
Build and rebuild soil structure.
Reduce water use and increase water holding
capacity.
10. Why We Need a Soil Food Web?
Plants depend on beneficial soil organisms.
Soil organisms create a living, dynamic system.
Beneficial microscopic organisms of various kinds that
perform vital functions.
Nutrient cycling and productivity increases.
11. A Highly Populated and Balanced Soil Food
Web
1. Create humus by decomposing organic matter.
2. Improve soil structure by binding particles together
and creating micro aggregates.
3. Protect roots from diseases and parasites.
4. Retain nitrogen and other plant nutrients.
5. Slowly release retained nutrients to the plant.
6. Produce enzymes and hormones that help plants
grow and resist stress.
7. Decompose pollutants that enter the soil.
12. Benefits of Soil Food Web
SOM decomposition.
Structure via synthesized metabolites.
Nutrient (NPS) assimilation and release.
Nutrient mineralization.
Breakdown of toxic materials.
N fixation.
Facilitation of nutrient recycling.
13. What Happens to Plants Without a
Functioning Soil Food Web?
The loss of symbiosis with soil microorganisms.
Plant growth affected.
Reduced resistance.
15. Soil Fertility
“The ability of a soil to provide a physical, chemical and
biological environment for the plant that is health
sustaining”.
Principles to Maintain Soil Fertility
1. Maintain a Proper Air to Water Balance.
2. Maintain Soil Tilth.
3. Prevent Erosion.
4. Maintain Soil Organic Matter Levels.
5. Maintain Biological Diversity.
6. Maintain a Proper Soil pH.
7. Maintain a Balance of Nutrients.
16. Soil Organisms are Important for
1. Decomposition.
2. Mixing soil (aeration).
18. CONCLUSION
Diversity has been thought to be a prerequisite for the
maintenance of stability, resistance and resilience for ecosystem
properties.
Plants characteristic strongly influenced by interactions with
aboveground and belowground trophic levels.
Soil microbial interactions can significantly alter plant productivity
and diversity.
Plants are the major part of the soil diversity.
In the below ground diversity mainly the soil microbes includes.
Other then soil microbes the soil arthropods, nematodes, annelids
etc.
In detritus based food webs there is strong potential for ‘top-down
effect” at low trophic levels and ‘bottom-up effect’ at high trophic
levels.
19. References
Deyn G.B.D., and Putten W.H.V. (2005) Linking aboveground
and belowground diversity. TRENDS in Ecology and Evolution
Vol.20 No.11.
Putten W.H.P., Vet L.E.M., Harvey J.A. and Wäckers F.L.
(2001) Linking above- and belowground multitrophic interactions
of plants, herbivores, pathogens, and their antagonists.
TRENDS in Ecology & Evolution Vol.16 No.10.
Copyright 2005 Living Proof with ASAP www.asapsupplier.com
www.footprintdirections.com.
Benefits of the Soil Food web soil microbiology explained (2005)
sustainability.