Nitrogen is not in lattice structure of soil minerals. There are some sedimentary rocks that have nitrogen in them that we didn't consider in the past, but for the most part, nitrogen enters the biosphere from nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria, lichen, or lightning.
You mean that most nitrogen going into the soil is actually derived from organic matter that is left behind and not from the parent material as described in this video? Do you have a credible source for this? (Not saying you are wrong, just doing my own research on this)
@HASUDS-cc2mo To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com and visit our website here: www.soilfoodweb.com/?page_id=19296
At 1:10 there the image of the soil food web. I've seen that image quite a few times. Can somebody tell me if there is a video that goes through that image item by item? I want an exact breakdown. :)
Con base a este video comprendo desde mis palabras que un ciclo de nutrientes es el movimiento e intercambio de materia orgánica e inorgánica para regresar a la producción de materia viva. Asimismo el proceso es regulado por los caminos de la red trófica que descomponen la materia en nutrientes minerales.
I would like to understand the reduced cost to farmers claim mentioned in the video at 2:07. It's logical, however, is there any financial/analytical evidence that actually supports that claim. Where can I find it? I would like to peer review the data. Thanks.
I'm acting like a sponge for a few weeks now, absorbing all this wonderful information. I have a question : listening to all that information on the soil food web, i have the impression that we can grow almost anything in any soil. For example, i heard that with a parent material with 40% of clay or more, you can't grow vegetables or certain fruit trees, that every type of soil has its purpose. But listening to you now i feel like you "just" have to bring the right set of micro organisms and you're good to go
I've been listening to podcasts with Elaine Ingham and the question you're asking (and I'm asking) sent me to TH-cam and this video. If we no longer need to add manure and compost to our yards (my main interest), small gardens and huge crop fields, .... That completely changes everything we've been doing and sounds almost too simple. Is creating the ideal microbe environment our primary goal now? Do we set it up, get out of their way, and just watch the plants and microbes feed each other year after year?
oil wells refill and are not fossil based, look into it because much science is now SCIENTISM, and try a Dr Rupert Sheldrake on the problems with dogmatic destruction of real science. kind regards Legends
Animals including people also play a role! when we eat plant vegetables and fruit we poop on the surface of the soil an that waste is integrated into the soil and plants take it up again and we eat the plants this is the nutrient cycle I was looking for
@@soilfoodwebschool Hmmm, is it that the chemical fertilizers get absorbed by 40%? I thought last time it was 20%... or perhaps I just heard 20% from another lecture and that's why it stuck out to me. I don't remember getting as much as 40% out of the chemical fertilizers though. If that's not it, what is it? I listened to it again and I couldn't pin it down.
Hopefully I remember this correctly. I heard from a John Kempf webinar that the amount of fertilizer utilized by the plant and the soil food web is highly dependent upon the particular form of fertilizer. An example given was about nitrogen fertilizer : N32 and N28 fertilizers have shown 20%-60% absorption while N20 urrea is almost completely absorbed. But, these things seem to be only necessary when dealing with poor soil biology. Over a 2-5 year period it is possible to wean off the nitrogen fertilizers completely by stimulating soil biology properly and discontinuing the damage causing management practices, like deep tillage and pesticide applications, that have caused the problems in the first place. :)
Currently I am … enrolled? Well I’m taking your school and so far I love it currently I’m on lecture 5 lesson 1.( and this is coming from a 12 year old ).
i have a doubt if any organism dies and gets decomposed in the soil then how is the food chain UNIDIRECTIONAL?? bcs all the nutrients of the organism gets passed on to the SOIL but its unidirection HOW?? WHY??
Thank you for this! Now I understand how nutrient cycling works.
Fantastic! Glad we can help!
Nitrogen is not in lattice structure of soil minerals. There are some sedimentary rocks that have nitrogen in them that we didn't consider in the past, but for the most part, nitrogen enters the biosphere from nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria, lichen, or lightning.
You mean that most nitrogen going into the soil is actually derived from organic matter that is left behind and not from the parent material as described in this video? Do you have a credible source for this? (Not saying you are wrong, just doing my own research on this)
I’m sorry but your very wrong.
Thank you, I have a test tommorow and I didn’t study at all yet and I need to study for a lot of things. Thank you, this really helped
Very nice. New Zealand is my favorite country. And agriculture is also my favorite subject. So I want to take agricultural training.
@HASUDS-cc2mo To learn more about our course offerings, please let us know about your goals and interests so that we can help you find the course(s) that will work best for you. Send to info@soilfoodweb.com and visit our website here: www.soilfoodweb.com/?page_id=19296
At 1:10 there the image of the soil food web. I've seen that image quite a few times.
Can somebody tell me if there is a video that goes through that image item by item?
I want an exact breakdown. :)
Con base a este video comprendo desde mis palabras que un ciclo de nutrientes es el movimiento e intercambio de materia orgánica e inorgánica para regresar a la producción de materia viva. Asimismo el proceso es regulado por los caminos de la red trófica que descomponen la materia en nutrientes minerales.
I would like to understand the reduced cost to farmers claim mentioned in the video at 2:07. It's logical, however, is there any financial/analytical evidence that actually supports that claim. Where can I find it? I would like to peer review the data. Thanks.
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
I'm acting like a sponge for a few weeks now, absorbing all this wonderful information.
I have a question : listening to all that information on the soil food web, i have the impression that we can grow almost anything in any soil. For example, i heard that with a parent material with 40% of clay or more, you can't grow vegetables or certain fruit trees, that every type of soil has its purpose.
But listening to you now i feel like you "just" have to bring the right set of micro organisms and you're good to go
There is still temperature and ph range to consider.
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
I've been listening to podcasts with Elaine Ingham and the question you're asking (and I'm asking) sent me to TH-cam and this video. If we no longer need to add manure and compost to our yards (my main interest), small gardens and huge crop fields, .... That completely changes everything we've been doing and sounds almost too simple. Is creating the ideal microbe environment our primary goal now? Do we set it up, get out of their way, and just watch the plants and microbes feed each other year after year?
@@jonhildebrand2995 I think we should add them, but for example we need to add the biologycally complete compost from the soil food web camp
oil wells refill and are not fossil based, look into it because much science is now SCIENTISM, and try a Dr Rupert Sheldrake on the problems with dogmatic destruction of real science.
kind regards Legends
Thanks for the invaluable video.
Animals including people also play a role! when we eat plant vegetables and fruit we poop on the surface of the soil an that waste is integrated into the soil and plants take it up again and we eat the plants this is the nutrient cycle I was looking for
Thank you 😊 this was helpful I was going to present about it ❤❤😂
Great video
I put foodscraps near my wallmut tree and its doing great!
Great video.
Thanks this will help me with my exam
I mean this video will help😅
Bakya..Organic centre salaipudhuoor.kodumudi.Tamil Nadu.
Love your videos. How can I ensure that my soil is nutrient rich when growing food in containers? Thank you!
Add compost to top, compost teas,
Potted plants are def isolated from the soil food web
@@kotukuwhakapiko467 Yes, that is very true. Just started raising red worms for their beneficial castings.
Nice... I like it
Short and very informative video, could you please make Short videos on making Aerobic Compost Tea and Aerobic Compost
Great video, but did it get rey-loaded, seems like it was uploaded a few weeks ago
@@soilfoodwebschool Hmmm, is it that the chemical fertilizers get absorbed by 40%? I thought last time it was 20%... or perhaps I just heard 20% from another lecture and that's why it stuck out to me. I don't remember getting as much as 40% out of the chemical fertilizers though.
If that's not it, what is it? I listened to it again and I couldn't pin it down.
@@soilfoodwebschool Wait... so I found the edit???
Hopefully I remember this correctly. I heard from a John Kempf webinar that the amount of fertilizer utilized by the plant and the soil food web is highly dependent upon the particular form of fertilizer. An example given was about nitrogen fertilizer : N32 and N28 fertilizers have shown 20%-60% absorption while N20 urrea is almost completely absorbed. But, these things seem to be only necessary when dealing with poor soil biology. Over a 2-5 year period it is possible to wean off the nitrogen fertilizers completely by stimulating soil biology properly and discontinuing the damage causing management practices, like deep tillage and pesticide applications, that have caused the problems in the first place. :)
@@SkipLaC Weaning off nitrogen would be fantastic
I thing that it should be law to have to use the soil food web and against the law do grow with synthetics
Great video!
Great 👍
Currently I am … enrolled? Well I’m taking your school and so far I love it currently I’m on lecture 5 lesson 1.( and this is coming from a 12 year old ).
i have a doubt
if any organism dies and gets decomposed in the soil then how is the food chain UNIDIRECTIONAL?? bcs all the nutrients of the organism gets passed on to the SOIL but its unidirection
HOW?? WHY??
✅ Find out more about Soil Food Web 👉 bit.ly/3xwjJ1M
Why bacteria harvest nitrogen and other elements from organic mater and parent material?. Their food is given by plants right?
The role of insects in nutrients recycling?
Thank you for the great question! Please contact us at info@soilfoodweb.com so a member of our Science Team can get back to you.
Not at all useful. What do we do if our soil is completely depleted!? How do we restore that balance? What do we add to the soil?
It is stated at the start. Add organic matter/mulch.
this is the video that my teacher showed and i found it lol
WLHS anyone?
Mntap
didnt ask
ket:chup
OwO