Te Awamutu Courier

‘Save soil' Why we need to act now

Why we need bio-diversity

- Bala Tikkisetty Waikato RegionalR Council Sustainabl­e Agri Advisor

One teaspoon of soil contains more living organisms than there are people in the world, and New Zealand loses about 192 million tonnes of soil to the ocean every year.

Without this “biological diversity”, there would be no terrestria­l life on Earth. In addition to providing habitat for billions of organisms, soil acts as a water filter and growing medium. It contribute­s to biodiversi­ty, solid waste treatment, acts as a filter for wastewater and supports agricultur­e.

Unlocking the secrets of this complex chemical, physical and biological powerhouse - a powerful source of “natural capital” - has had a huge impact on human life.

The transforma­tion of this type of natural capital into resources that people value and use is generally called ecosystem services.

It is a concept gaining more attention as we see environmen­tal pressure increasing­ly applied to the health of resources, such as soil, which we once took for granted.

Functional land management is a resource management framework that seeks to optimise the cropping and environmen­tal returns from land. It focuses on soil functions related to agricultur­al land use: primary production, water purificati­on and regulation, carbon cycling and storage, functional and intrinsic biodiversi­ty, and nutrient cycling.

Building on that good work, some areas still need improvemen­t.

Good practices needed include optimum cultivatio­n and avoiding over-grazing and heavy grazing under wet weather, both of which can damage the soil’s structure and lead to compaction.

Others include carefully matching fertiliser applicatio­ns to suit soil and crop requiremen­ts, practising appropriat­e use of pesticides and other agrochemic­als, managing pasture to maintain complete soil cover and careful applicatio­n of farm dairy effluent to avoid saturation and to optimise organic matter and nutrient status.

Minimising human-induced erosion and maintainin­g good soil quality are essential for maintainin­g soil ecosystem services such as nutrient- and water-buffering, productive capacity, assimilati­ng waste, and minimising impacts of sediment and other contaminan­ts on waterbodie­s.

Protecting sensitive areas on farms also benefits production. For example, wetlands deliver a wide range of ecosystem services such as improving water quality, flood regulation, coastal protection, and providing recreation­al opportunit­ies and fish habitat.

The Waikato Regional Council’s soil quality monitoring programme measures soil properties such as soil compaction, nutrient status, biological activity, soil carbon and organic matter at about 150 active sites (some sites are lost due to urban expansion etc, but new sites are added to keep the total number at 150).

About 30 sites are sampled each year, so it takes five years to get around all 150 sites. The sites covered include the major land uses and soil types within the region.

The results show issues such as compaction and excessive nutrients, and a variety of trends, such as an improvemen­t in some indicators like macroporos­ity (a measure of the proportion of large pores in the soil that provide the air supply to roots). The latter is most likely attributab­le to good land management practices undertaken by our farming community.

The council is committed to working with farmers, the wider agricultur­e sector and other stakeholde­rs to increase the understand­ing of soil issues and to provide advice on sustainabl­e agricultur­e practices that decrease impacts on our natural capital.

Soil is one of the most valuable assets that a farmer has. It is our collective responsibi­lity to make use of soils without damaging either the soil or any other part of our environmen­t, protecting them for our own use and use by future generation­s.

Let us name this decade as the “Save Soil” decade.

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