services

The lab measuring the life in your soil

Recommended

formsSample submission forms Use the submission forms on these lab pages to send samples.

formsUse this Sample Submission Checklist to take you through the process if you need the help.

SFI Consulting Services
Rate $25 per 1/4 hour
Call 1 . 5 4 1. 7 5 2 . 5 0 6 6

What tests to order
Making decisions regarding what you want to know about your sample.

State the question you are trying to answer very clearly. The tests you need then should become clear.

Guiding Principles:

  1. What information will give you the ability to make decisions? What knowledge is needed?
  2. The accuracy of the information you obtain is only as good as the accuracy of the sample. If you collect the wrong sample, you can’t get the information you need.
  3. When doing organism assessments, what part of the plant will be most affected by organisms? When doing soil chemistry, what part of the plant will be most affected? Take samples in those places where the plant will be most affected, most rapidly, relative to what you think is most important.
    1. Keep this in mind when looking at drip wells versus drive lanes, etc.
    2. Keep this in mind when looking at drip wells versus drive lanes, etc.
    3. Spring, summer, autumn, winter? What season tells you the most information? What season can you affect the plant most by altering organisms or chemistry?
    4. How many sub-samples do you need to take to accurately represent what you want to know about?
  4. There is a best soil food web, and a best foliar food web for each combination of crop type, climate region, soil type, amount of organic matter and water supply. The ideal food web balance for row crops in Arizona is different than the ideal balance for fruit trees or grapes in California.
  5. For example, you want to know if your soil is healthy. That means a full food web analysis is needed, since you don’t know what part of the food web may or may not be "out of whack".
  6. If you have done a food web analysis in the past, and know your soil lacks fungal activity, for example, then all you need to assess is fungal activity, and probably total fungal biomass. Perhaps mycorrhizal colonization as well, since this assay includes disease encountered on the root system, as well as insect feeding damage.
Useful information
Information given by each test

Active Bacteria/Active Fungi
measure the numbers and biomass of bacteria and fungi that are actively feeding and reproducing

Total Bacteria/Total Fungi
measures the total amount of bacteria and fungi, including the active populations differentiated in the previous tests

Morphological Species Diversity
a significant improvement over plate counts

Nematode Numbers and Community Structure
count and identify nematodes and report numbers of nematodes per gram dry soil

Protozoa
Assess whether the sample is aerobic, or anaerobic

Mycorrhizal fungi (VAM)
The kind and amount of beneficial mycorrhizal colonization on the roots

Beneficial Organism Package
Are the desirable beneficial organisms in your soil, compost or compost tea? Find Out! Build Soil Health!

Microarthropods
Provides information on the numbers and identification to major group of the visible soil critters

Foliage Assay
Determination of the area of leaf surface occupied by microorganisms

Total Foodweb Assay
There is a discount for running all these assays instead of each individual one

© 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008 Soil Foodweb, Inc.