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THE SOIL FOOD WEB
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THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Dec 15, 2015

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Daquan Dott
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Page 1: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

THE SOIL FOOD WEB

Page 2: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Soil Biology and the Landscape

Page 3: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

The Soil Food Web

Page 4: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Components of Soil Organic Matter

Decomposing organic matter(active fraction) 33% - 50%

Stabilized organic matter

(humus) 33% - 50%

Fresh residue <10%

Living organisms

<5%

Page 5: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Rhizosphere

Page 6: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Microbial Biomass with Depth

Page 7: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Seasonal Microbial Activity

Page 8: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

FOOD WEB & SOIL HEALTH

Page 9: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Biomass of Soil Organisms in Four Ecosystems

Page 10: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Typical Numbers of Soil Organisms in Healthy Ecosystems

Ag Land Prairie Forest

Organisms per gram (teaspoon) of soil

Bacteria 100 mil. -1 bil. 100 mil. -1 bil. 100 mil. -1 bil.

Fungi Several yards 10s – 100’s of yds 1-40 miles

(in conifers)

Protozoa 1000’s 1000’s 100,000’s

Nematodes 10-20 10’s – 100’s 100’s

Organisms per square foot

Arthropods < 100 500-2000 10,000-25,000

Earthworms 5-30 10-50 10-50

(0 in conifers)

Page 11: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Methods for Measuring the Food Web

Counting •Direct counts of individuals

•Plate counts of colonies

Activity levels •Respiration (CO2 production)

•Nitrification rates

•Decomposition rates

Cellular constituents •Biomass C, N, or P

•Enzymes

•Phospholipids

•DNA and RNA

Page 12: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Bacteria with fluorescent stain for counting

Page 13: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

A Complex Food Web

Page 14: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Complexity of the Soil Food Web in Several Ecosystems

Page 15: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Two Bugs are Better Than One

Effects of bacteria and bacterial-feeding nematodes on blue grama grass growth

Page 16: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

BACTERIA

Page 17: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Nitrogen-fixing Bacteria

Nodules formed where Rhizobium bacteria infected soybean roots.

Page 18: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Actinomycetes

• Bacterial cells• Grow like fungal hyphae

Page 19: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Bacteria vs. fungi

Page 20: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

FUNGI

Page 21: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Fungi and Soil Quality

• Decompose carbon compounds• Improve OM accumulation• Retain nutrients in the soil• Bind soil particles• Food for the rest of the food web• Mycorrhizal fungi• Compete with plant pathogens

Page 22: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Mycorrhizae

Tree root

Mycorrhizal structure

Fungal hyphae

Page 23: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Ectomycorrhizae

Page 24: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Arbuscular Mycorrhizae (AM)

Page 25: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.
Page 26: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Mushrooms:The fruiting body of some fungi

Page 27: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Mycorrhizal Fungi

Page 28: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

PROTOZOA

Ciliates • Largest of the three

• Move by means of hair-like cilia

• Eat the other protozoa and bacteria

Amoebae • Also large

• Move by means of a temporary foot (pseudopod)

• Include testate amoebae (with shell-like covering), and naked amoebae

Flagellates • Smallest of the three

• Move by means of a few ship-like flagella.

Page 29: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

PROTOZOA

Page 30: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Flagellate

Page 31: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Ciliate

Page 32: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Amoebae

Page 33: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Mineralization and Immobilization

Organisms consume other organisms and excrete inorganic wastes.

Inorganic nutrients are usable by plants, and are mobile in soil.

Organic nutrients are stored in soil

organisms and organic matter.

Organisms take up and retain nutrients

as they grow.

Page 34: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Soil-Dwelling “Vampires”

Page 35: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

NEMATODES

Page 36: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

NEMATODES

Page 37: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predatory Nematode

Page 38: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Root-feeding nematodes

Page 39: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Nematode Trappers

Fungal hyphal rings constrict when a nematode swims through.

Page 40: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

ARTHROPODS

Page 41: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Mites and Biodiversity

Page 42: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Types of Arthropods

Shredders

Predators

Herbivores

Fungal-feeders

Page 43: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Shredders

Page 44: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predators (1)

Page 45: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predators (2):Pseudoscorpions

Page 46: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predators (4): Centipedes

Page 47: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predators (5): Scorpions

Page 48: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Predators (6)

Page 49: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Herbivores

Page 50: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Springtails (fungal feeders)• Abundant in many soils.• Feed on some disease-causing fungi.• Jump by slamming their tail down.

Page 51: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

What is in Your Soil?

Berlese funnel

Pitfall trap

Page 52: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

EARTHWORMS

Page 53: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Earthworms bury litter

Page 54: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Earthworm burrow

Page 55: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Vertical burrows

Page 56: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Earthworm casts

Page 57: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Earthworm burrow opening

Page 58: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Earthworm burrow opening

Midden pile

Burrow opening

Page 59: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Reproduction

Page 60: THE SOIL FOOD WEB. Soil Biology and the Landscape.

Night crawlers and tillage

With Lumbricus terrestrisWithout Lumbricus terrestris