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A. 4. Compost Tea
12 steps four — eight
Step Four
Just like any other creature, fungi require food. Feed
the beneficial fungi, if fungal activity is too low.
Sloughed root cells and dead plant tissue often supply
the more complex carbon substrates that fungi require,
such as cellulose, cutins, lipopolysaccharides, complex
protein-sugar-carbohydrate, and lignins. Fungi are good
at condensing organic matter into ever more complex forms,
such as fulvic to humic acids. Fungi need N, P, K, Ca,
and all the other nutrients as well, and obtain those
from organic matter and from inorganic sources as well.
Many species of fungi can solubilize mineral elements
from the mineral components of soil, but no one species
effectively solubilizes ALL minerals. A diversity of
species is needed to obtain all nutrients.
Often soil tests will indicate that some nutrient is
in low supply, but merely by adding the appropriate bacterial
or fungal species, these organisms will convert plant
unavailable nutrients into plant available forms. Diversity
is the key, however, as well as feeding that diverse
set of species so they will perform their functions.
Both bacteria and fungi are important in holding nutrients
in the soil when they would otherwise leach into deeper
soil layers, and into ground water. The importance
of microbes in forming soil structure and preventing
erosion
is well-known, but in order to hold the nutrients in
soil, bacteria and fungi must turn them into biomass,
which is not-leachable as long as the glues and strands
that the fungi and bacteria use to hold themselves
on any surface are not destroyed.
- If activity is low, then fungal foods need to be added to increase growth rates and improve numbers.
A diversity of foods needs to be added, and thus
dead leaf material is a much better choice than purified cellulose.
Fish hydrolysate also adds bacterial foods, and
N and other micronutrients. Wood, sawdust, bark, paper and
cardboard can be used as well, but diversity is key.
- If activity is higher than the desired, then try to balance
the ratios of the organisms by improving the organism group that is too low.
- If active fungal
biomass is low, but total fungal biomass is high,
this is a good indicator that disease is either rampant, or about to be
rampant. Add BENEFICIAL fungal foods and build soil structure as
rapidly as possible to compete with the disease,
and protect the plant roots from the disease.
- In rare instances, it may be because some environmental disturbance occurred
that put the majority of the fungi to sleep, but did not kill them.
Step Five
Mycorrhizal fungi are needed by some plants, absolutely
critical for other plants, and are probably detrimental
for other plants. You need to know what kind of plant
you have, but in general, very early successional plant
species, such as many (weeds, brassicas, mustards and
kale crops do not require mycorrhizal fungal and may
be harmed by mycorrhizal fungi. Annual vegetables,
flowers, grasses and row crops or broadacre crops
need vesicular-arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi. Most evergreen plants require ectomycorrhizal
fungi, and blueberry and ericoid plants require ericoid
mycorrhizal fungi.
The percentage of the root system
that must be colonized has not been fully established
in the mycorrhizal literature,
mostly because determining benefit is relative. Mycorrhizal
fungi can protect the roots from disease organisms,
through simple spatial interference, by improving nutrient
uptake,
and by producing glomulin and other metabolites that
inhibit disease. Stress in plants can be reduced because
the mycorrhizal fungi can solubilize mineral nutrients
from plant not-available forms to plant available forms,
and translocate those nutrients to the root system
in exchange for sugars provided by the plant.
Given
that mycorrhizal fungi can influence so many aspects
of plant growth, and documenting all these
benefits is
usually extremely expensive and difficult, they have
not been documented. Therefore, probably the best that
can be done is to say that perhaps as low as 12% colonization
might be documented to be beneficial (work by Moore
and Reeves in the mid-1990’s), but more likely
a minimum level of 40% colonization is required, as
suggested by
Mosse, and St. John in various publications and comments.
Early
researchers found colonization as high as 80% in root
systems, but most likely because they did not
differentiate
false-arbuscular and vesicular structures produced
by disease-causing fungi from true VAM structures.
Thus,
colonization is rarely as high as 80% is not commonly
found now that we recognize these non-mycorrhizal forms.
In
the last 10 years, some researchers have suggested
that some mycorrhizal fungi do not produce vesicules
under all conditions, and so VA mycorrhizal fungi should
be called arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi, not vesicular-arbuscular
mycorrhizal fungi. Just be aware that sometimes, people
say VAM, sometimes AM. Whatever.
- If the plant does
not require mycorrhizal colonization, there probably
is no reason to assess the roots for
mycorrhizal colonization. Although the Allens showed
that one way
for certain plants to exclude non-mycorrhizal plants
from a community was to make sure the mycorrhizal
fungi were present, because the mycorrhizal fungi
pulled
nutrients from the non-mycorrhizal plants. This is
a probable mechanism
for mycorrhizal crop plants being able to out compete
weeds and earlier successional plant species.
- When
mycorrhizal colonization is low, or less than the
desired range, given that the desired plant requires
VAM or ectomycorrhizal colonization or ericoid
mycorrhizal fungi, then check how low the colonization
is.
- If less than perhaps 10 to 15%, then addition of
mycorrhizal spores would be a good idea. If it is an annual plant, placing VAM spores near or on the seed or seed
pieces is the simplest way to get the roots colonized as soon as the roots area produced.
- With permanent turf, adding VAM spores into the compost
mixed into the aeration cores gets the VAM spores into the root system
without destroying the turf.
- With perennial plants, verti-mulching and adding the VAM or ecto- spores
into the compost mixed in the vertimulch is the simplest way to get the
spores next to the root system. In cases where
we have added inoculum in this fashion, roots have gone from 0% colonization
to 25 to 30% within a year, and to 50
to 60% in two years, with addition of humic acids through the season
to help the mycorrhizal fungi grow rapidly (see next section)
- If colonization is between 15% and 40%, then all that is needed
is additional fungal foods to help the mycorrhizal
fungi improve plant growth, reduce plant
stress, and improve root protection.
- There is a dose response relationship
to humic acids additions. Typically addition
of 2 to 4 pounds of dry product, or 1 to 2
gallons of liquid
product per acre are adequate to improve fungal growth. But, if there
are toxic chemical
residues to overcome, additional humics of fulvics may be needed. It
is best to check periodically to see that colonization is improving
as desired.
- Be aware that that most humic
acid products contain 10 to 12% humic
acids. If the product you are considering is less expensive, please
check the concentration
of humic acid. Half the concentration of the humic acid means they
can drop the price, but your fungi get less
benefit.
- Check colonization periodically
to make sure the fungi are growing and colonization
is increasing. Weather can cause problems with
colonization,
and severe drought,
floods, burns, compaction causing by over-grazing, heavy machinery,
herds of people walking on the lawns or turf can reduce colonization.
If that
happens,
additional applications of fungal foods will be needed to help resuscitate
the damage. Fungi are just like any other organism. If they are harmed,
they need
care to recover. Triage for fungi includes adding foods they love (humic
acid
is like chocolate to a choc-a-holic, but they’ll also accept
any woody, wide C:N ratio fungal food), and putting on a mulch or litter
layer on the
soil surface.
- If colonization is above 40%, then the plants
are getting the help they need from the fungi.
Periodically check to make sure nothing has harmed
them.
- What if colonization seems too high? This
is extremely rare, but does happen, and seems
to be associated with the fungi taking more than
their fair share of the plant’s resources.
Stop applying fungal foods. Consider helping
the bacteria compete with the fungi for a bit.
Steps Six, Seven, Eight
Flagellates (Six), Amoebae (Seven), Ciliates (Eight). These are the three
groups of protozoa and they are critical in a bacterial-dominated soil, because
the plants need a way to access all the wonderful nutrients tied up in the
bacteria. Nutrients within the bacteria cannot be obtained by plant roots,
so something has to eat the bacteria to release those nutrients. That’s
what protozoa do. Protozoa also help build the larger soil pores by pushing
aggregates around as the protozoa search for and try to reach the bacteria
tucked away around soil particles.
- If the protozoa are too low in number, the nutrients
remain tied up in bacterial and fungal bodies. Even
if the bacteria and fungi die, they may not release
the nutrients in their bodies until the protozoa
come along. In many early microbial studies, microbiologists
doing plate counts did not recognize that the protozoa
were still in their “pure cultures”,
and it was the protozoa “mineralizing” nutrients,
not the bacteria themselves. When protozoa are too
low, and nematodes are too low as well, then inorganic
fertilizer will have to be added in order to supply
N, P, S etc to the plant. This is expensive and a
large proportion of these nutrients will likely be
lost from the soil, either by leaching or by volatilization.
Until the protozoa are inoculated and brought to
desired numbers, nutrient loss will continue to be
a problem. Protozoa inocula are available in the
form of good compost, good compost tea, or from a
commercial source, Holmes Environmental, holmesenviro@comcast.net
- If the protozoa are within the desired range, nutrients
will be made available for the plants are minimal
amounts over time. How much will be made available?
That will be discussed in the section on Plant Available
N made available to plants (see below). But reductions
in fertilizer applications should be possible if
protozoa are in good range.
- If protozoa numbers are extremely high, or the
different groups are very un-balanced, then nutrient
cycling will be variable, and there may be periods
when pulses of ammonium or nitrate may accumulate.
These forms are subject to leaching and loss through
gas production, and may result in weeds having the
nitrate they need to germinate, grow and outcompete
the crop or desired plant species.
- If ciliates are too high, then the soil is either
compacted or water-logged, and lacking oxygen. Ciliates
are aerobic organisms, but prefer to consume anaerobic
bacteria. They tolerate reduced oxygen conditions
better than the other protozoa, so high numbers of
ciliates indicate problems with the movement of oxygen
into the soil, which needs to be fixed. Of course,
it the soil gets too anaerobic, all three groups
of protozoa will be low.
- When ciliates are high, but flagellates and amoebae
are also high suggests that one of three things may
be happening:
- The sample has just become compacted, or flooded,
and the anaerobic conditions have just been initiated.
Generally the number of ciliates is not extremely high.
- The sample has aggregates, which are anaerobic inside
the aggregates. The high ciliate signal comes
from the internal parts of those
aggregates where
anaerobic conditions exist, but outside those aggregates,
aerobic conditions exist, and
thus flagellate and amoebae numbers are typically high as
well. Both anaerobes and aerobes co-exist, but
in very different
places within
the spatial structure
of this sample. This is very typical of good worm compost,
particularly worm compost high in castings.
- The sample has been anaerobic in the past, but is just becoming
aerobic. Flagellates and amoebae are growing because aerobic
bacteria have begun to grow. Generally, ciliate numbers will be fairly high, while flagellate and
amoebae are just barely in good range. Quite often this will result in
nitrate pulses and germination of weed seeds.
- When flagellates are high and amoebae low, or flagellates low
and amoebae high indicates an imbalance in nutrient cycling, with
pulses of nitrate being produced, resulting in weeds being able
to out-compete the desired plants.
- What do you feed protozoa? Bacteria. So, if you have taken care of
step one and two, the bacteria should be there for the protozoa to
eat.
< Steps 1 - 3 Steps 9 - 12 >
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Useful information

These microscope photographs of organisms from our labs are available for
your use in lectures and publications. |