Soil biota comprises a diverse range of organisms, including microorganisms like bacteria and fungi, and soil fauna like protozoa, nematodes, and earthworms. These organisms interact with each other and their environment in complex soil food webs. They play important roles in nutrient cycling by breaking down organic matter, recycling nutrients, and fixing nitrogen, which contributes to plant growth. Soil microbes also create humus and promote soil structure formation.
Judging the Relevance and worth of ideas part 2.pptx
Soil biota
1. TOPIC- SOIL BIOTA
Submitted to
DR.R.N. Singh
DEP. of soil science
IGKV RAIPUR
INDIRA GANDHI KRISHI VISHWVIDHYALYA RAIPUR (C.G.)
Submitted by
ANURAG GUPTA
MSC AGRICULTURE (DEPARTMENT
OF SOIL SCIENCE AND CHEMISTRY)
2. INTRODUCTION
“The animal and plant life of a particular region, habitat or geological
period is called biota”
Soil biota is a collective terms that encompasses all the organism
that spend a significant portion of their life cycles within a soil
profile or at the soil-litter interface.
The organisms that live in the soil are called soil organism.
Important group of soil organism are as fallows.
3. Soil Organisms
A. Soil Flora
a) Microflora:
Bacteria . Fungi, Molds, Yeast,
Mushroom 3. Actinomycetes, Stretomyces
4. Algae
b) Macroflora:
Roots of higher plants
4. B. Soil Fauna
a) Macrofauna: Mice, moles, etc.; Earthworms and other worms; Ants,
beetles, termites, spiders
b)Mesofauna: Nemaodes, arthropods (mites, centipedes, and springtails),
molluscs
c)Microfauna: Protozoa
5. Soil biota comprises an enormous diversity of
organisms, including microorganisms (i.e.,
bacteria, fungi) and soil fauna (microscopic and
macroscopic animals). Soil organisms interact
with each other, with the plant roots, and with
the environment.They constitute soil food webs
and contribute to nutrient cycling, which is
important for plants. focusing on the
rhizosphere and on an important group of soil
fungi, which interacting with plant roots, form
the mutualistic symbioses that are known as
mycorrhizae.
6. Soil microbes break down organic matter
Microorganisms play an important role in the
decomposition of organic matter. Different types of
microbes are specialised to different types of organic
matter, between them covering just about
everything.
Soil microbes recycle nutrients
Soil microbes play a crucial role in returning nutrients
to their mineral forms, which plants can take up
again.This process is known as mineralization.
7. Soil microbes create humus
When the soil microbes have broken down all they
can, what’s left is called humus, a dark brown jelly-like
substance that can remain unchanged in the soil for
potentially millennia. Humus helps the soil retain
moisture, and encourages the formation of soil
structure. Humus molecules are covered in negatively
charged sites that bind to positively charged ions
(cations) of plant nutrients, thus forming an important
component of a soil’s cation exchange capacity.
Humus is also suspected of suppressing plant
diseases.
8. Soil microbes create soil structure Some soil microbes secrete
polysaccharides, gums and glycoproteins, which glue soil minerals
together, forming the basis for soil structure. Fungal hyphae and
plant roots further bind soil aggregates together. Soil structure is
essential to good plant growth.
Soil microbes fix nitrogen
Agriculture depends heavily on the ability of certain microbes
(mainly bacteria) to convert atmospheric nitrogen (N2 gas) to
ammonia (NH3). Some live freely in the soil, while others live in
association with plant roots – the classic example is Rhizobium
bacteria in the roots of legumes.The process of conversion is
known as nitrogen fixation.
9. Soil organisms promote plant growth
Some soil microbes produce a variety of substances that promote
plant growth, including auxins, gibberellins and antibiotics.
Soil microbes control pests and diseases
The best known example of the use of soil microbes in pest control
is the commercial production of the soil bacterium Bacillus
thuringiensis (Bt) to control caterpillar pests of crops. Some strains
of Bt are used to control beetles and flies as well. Several strains of
the fungal genus Trichodermahave been developed as biocontrol
agents against fungal diseases of plants, mainly root diseases.
Various other genera of fungi are used for the control of insect
pests.
10. A text book of soil science by r.k. Mehra
Indian society of soil science
Vishwas and mukharjee
M.wikipedia.org