The Factors affecting soil fertility and productivity
Soil fertility is the ability of the soil to provide nutrients in proper
quantities and in a balanced way for the growth of plants. A fertile soil
should have the correct proportion of plants nutrients and optimum pH while Soil productivity is the capacity
of the soil, in its normal environment to support plant growth. Soil fertile greatly affects soil productivity. A fertile soil
always leads to high soil productivity
However, soil
productivity is affected or influenced y other factors other than the soil
fertility. For example, presence of weeds in the farms may lower the level of
productivity of the soil, even when the soil fertile. Other factors like
farming methods used may also lower the productivity of the soil. In farming, soil fertility may lost through many ways, some of
these ways are as result of human activities while others are
through natural process. The following are some ways through which soil
fertility may be lost:
(1) Leaching: This is common with nutrients that are highly soluble such as
nitrogen, these nutrients are carried to lower far from beyond the reach of
many plants roots, soil with many leached nutrients are infertility.
(2) Soil capping: This is when the soil is covered (capped) with an impervious
material which prevents the penetration of rainwater into the soil, this leads
to surface run – off. This denies the soil adequate moisture and exposes the
soil to erosion
(3) Soil erosion: This is the carrying away of the top fertile soil by moving
water and wind. Erosion leads to loss of the fertile top soil and plant
nutrients, this makes the soil infertility.
(4) Monocropping: Monocropping is the practice of growing one type of gropes on a
piece of land for a long time. The gropes grown uses only those nutrients it
needs while other nutrients remain unused, this leads to exhaustion of some
nutrients and eventually to their deficiency in the following yearsThere is
also likelihood of build up of pests and disease, the same pest and disease are
passed on from the residue of previous crop, this leads to low yield
(5) Accumulation of
salt:Soil water contains dissolved minerals salts
from the parent rock; some of the salt comes from decomposition of organic
matter.
Under normal
condition, the salts are washed away by rain water, thereby keeping their
concentration in the soil low. However in arid and semi-arid areas the rainfall
is irregular and is not enough to remove the salt from the soil.
This together with the
high evaporation rate and poor drainage, leads to accumulation of salt on or
below of the soil surface. The salt cause deficiency of water in plants as
water moves out of the root in the soil under the osmotic pressure of the salt
solution.
(6) Change in the pH: Inappropriate use of fertilizers may change the soil pH, for
example, the use of acidic fertilizer over a long period of time can make the
soil acidic.
Change in pH affects
the activity of the soil microorganisms and the availability of some nutrients.
This, in run, affects the fertility of the soil.
(7) Burning of
vegetation: When vegetation is
burned, organic matter is destroyed; this affects the activities of
microorganisms such as nitrogen fixation and decomposition of organic matter.Accumulation of the
resulting ash also causes imbalance of nutrients in the soil. Burning of
vegetation also exposes the soil to agents of erosion such as wind and water.
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