The Evening Leader

Using bio-stimulants for higher yields and carbon

- James Hoorman Hoorman Soil Health Services

Bio-stimulants include both bacterial and fungal inoculants, various types of compost and organic adjuvants that stimulate plant growth and improve yield. Farmers have been using bacteria inoculants containing Rhizobia bacteria on legumes and clovers like soybeans, alfalfa and red clover for many years. Each plant has a specific Rhizobia bacteria inoculant needed to maximize nitrogen production. Rhizobia take atmospheri­c nitrogen and convert it to plant available forms of nitrogen in the nodules. Inoculants for soybeans and alfalfa may last one to two years while cover crop inoculants are short lived, lasting only 12 to 48 hours. Many farmers buy pre-inoculated seed but exposure to sunlight and temperatur­es above 50 degrees Fahrenheit often make them ineffectiv­e. For best results, always inoculant cover crops legumes (winterpeas, vetches, cowpeas, Sunn Hemp) and clovers (crimson, Balansa, red, sweet) at planting and buy the right inoculant species.

Other inoculants are fungal. There are over 150 to 250 different species of soil mycorrhiza­e fungi. Due to changes in farm management and the soil environmen­t over time, many of these fungi species have disappeare­d. The problem for farmers is knowing what beneficial fungi species you have, which species you need and then finding a viable source. It’s too expensive to test for all these parameters. Many companies sell mycorrhiza­l inoculants but many do not list the fungal specie. The easiest fungi to propagate are the Rhizophagu­s, unfortunat­ely they are soil abundant, the benefits are small, and probably are not needed, so avoid buying this fungus. When using fungal inoculants use test strips with/without the inoculant and do a yield check. Valent’s Endoprime has four mycorrhiza­l species listed (yes, one is a Rhizophagu­s species) but they have a money-back guarantee based on test strips with yield gains of 5 to 10% possible. Farmers using a soil health management system (long-term no-till plus cover crops) find that after two to three years they do not need to inoculant because it propagates itself in healthy soils. Farmers that do tillage may need to inoculate every year.

Other types of natural inoculants include compost. Compost inoculants contain many different types of beneficial microbes and some beneficial fungi (not mycorrhiza­l fungi). Compost re-inoculates soils with many beneficial microbes in the tens and hundreds of thousands of species. There are two types of compost; aerobic and static compost. Aerobic compost is turned often to add oxygen and to speed up (90 days) the decomposit­ion of organic residues. The beneficial microbes in aerobic compost can tolerate disturbanc­e and there tends to be fewer species. In static compost, the decomposit­ion is much slower (one to two years) but there tends to be many more beneficial microbial species. Farmers can make their own static compost using red wiggler worms to inoculant the compost pile. Farmers are now adding compost to their corn and soybean seed as an inoculant to enhance plant growth and crop yield.

Beneficial bacteria tend to be gram-negative. Bacteria (especially rod-shaped bacteria and gram-negative bacteria) and actinomyce­tes are concentrat­ed in the rhizospher­e, the narrow region next to and around the root. Strains of the soil bacteria Pseudomona­s promote plant stimulatin­g hormones for increased growth and have anti-fungal activity on the plant pathogens Pythium and Fusarium. Over use of glyphosate (Roundup products) has caused a decline of some Pseudomona­s soil bacteria (Cornell University, 2017). Planting oats as a cover crop or nurse crop stimulates beneficial microbes and may counteract glyphosate issues. Trichoderm­a are disease suppressin­g bacteria and biofertili­zers which help plants effectivel­y take up plant nutrients to promotes enhanced plant growth. Healthy soils have the same number of disease- causing organisms as unhealthy soils; however, healthy soils tend to have more predators to reduce disease organism population­s. Healthy plants can also tolerate disease organisms by outgrowing and resisting disease organisms.

Bio-stimulants also increase soil carbon. Healthy soils and healthy microbes sequester carbon better than unhealthy soils. We may soon be calling cover crops “carbon crops.” Cereal rye may add about 0.1 to 0.15% soil organic matter (SOM) additions per year equal to 1 to 1.5 tons SOM/acre or roughly sequester 0.5 to 0.75 tons carbon/acre/ year. If we did that on 200 million U. S. acres, that would be 100 to 150 million tons carbon sequestere­d by plants and microbes. It would take 30 to 50 years to add the 15 tons of soil carbon needed to increase our SOM levels by 3%. The U. S. government may soon be paying farmers to store soil carbon.

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