A Top Idea that holds water
From WetNews 6 October 1999
Introduction
Internationally
renowned soil scientist and cropping advisor in the USA Neal
Kinsey, says that that a sand will hold maybe 1 inch of water
in the topsoil "to the depth a post will". He says a clay
soil will hold maybe 3 inches. The research carried out in
the U.K. by the author shows that we now have the ability
to hold 5 to 10 inches.
BILL BUTTERWORTH,
a geo-recycling specialist, reports on research that points
to the potentially huge and far-reaching agronomic and environmental
benefits.
One way of using
organic waste in the UK - most of which is currently put to
landfill - is to recycle it to topsoils, where - as research
shows - it can hold 2 to 10 times its own weight in rainfall.
Some believe that - in effect - this practice would create
a 100-billion gallon "reservoir" - but at no capital cost
and whose environmental impacts even the most extreme lobby
would find difficult to reject.
This blowing
sand in Suffolk with less than 230mm of annual rainfall, normally,
in most farms in the region, takes 150mm of irrigation to
grow a root crop. This was turned into...
(Picture soil
02).....
this, which is
a fertile soil growing a good crop of fodder beet without
irrigation. The difference was that contractor Aiwyn Moss
of Mildenhall applied 250 tonnes per hectare of partially
composted, shredded newsprint including some raw biosolids
sludge (4%). It was applied in the autumn before the crop
was planted so as to act as a topsoil reservoir. Note the
concentrated compost layer about 150mm below the surface.
-insert-
Field research
through out the UK - but most dramatically on the blowing
sands of East Anglia - shows that adding 250 tonnes per hectare
of partly decomposed organic material (avoiding the word "compost")
can raise the water-holding capacity of the land. In this
way, about 1000 to 2500 tonnes of rainwater per hectare can
be held for crop growth the following season.
Agronomic Gains
At the 2000-tonne
holding level, even in East Anglia, most crops can be grown
without further irrigation. Even for top yields and in poor
rainfall/high sunshine years the need for irrigation is dramatically
reduced. Add the material in September, plough in and grow
a root crop next year without irrigation.
Generally speaking,
according to the research, partly composted materials absorb
2 to 10 times their own weight in water. Shredded newsprint,
for example, will absorb 5 to 10 times its own weight. When
applied to soils, there are agronomic plusses and minuses,
which can be managed.
Provided that
the need to change agricultural practice in order to accommodate
the additions, is understood and remembered, there are major
advantages from a purely agronomic point of view. These include:
Irrigation-need advantage |
Less drought stress in the crop |
Lower power requirements in cultivations
|
Better soil structure and trafficability
|
Lower leaching of nitrogen |
Less crop disease |
Less use of spray chemicals |
Overall, higher yields at lower cost |
Top
Soil Reservoirs
Top soil reservoirs
are likely to have the greatest effect on crops on soils,
which are 100%, i.e. without a grass break. In the east of
the UK, these soils are often at below 2% "organic matter"
and sometimes less than 0.5%.
There does appear
to be some significance in defining what way be meant by "organic
matter". Soil scientists generally mean a complex organic
mixture which is derived from plant and animal remains but
which does not allow identification of individual parts of
plants or animal parts under the microscope i.e. it is a homogeneous
dirty black paste.
Looking at water-holding
capacity, undecomposed material is important, and the soil
now becomes a dynamic processing factory, little short of
a horizontal compost heap - much as occurs naturally on a
forest floor. To put it another way, the soil is turned into
a blotting paper framework to house enormous numbers of small
fauna and flora.
VAM Fungi
In this discussion,
the most significant of these small fauna are mycorrhiza,
the small fungi which surround plant roots. These vasicular
arbuscular mycorrhiza (or VAM fungi) are deeply involved in
water and nutrient uptake by the plant and in plant disease
control.
These mycorrhiza
have another twist which completes a remarkable loop in the
story (see below).
Incidentally,
in a recent advance discovered by Sarah Wright at the famous
agricultural research centre of the USDA at Beisville, the
protein that binds soil particles together to form "crumbs"
was identified and named "glomalin". It is made by the mycorrhiza
from organic matter.
Waste Tonnage
There are, of
course, many estimates of how much waste is collected in the
UK annually and in different categories. Some of the figures
have some substance in researched reality; some have become
accepted simply because somebody made a guess many years ago,
and the figure has been quoted so often that we all believe
it.
Looking at those
figures, and observing that high volume/low value materials
are economically difficult to recycle in the conventional
sense, it appears that maybe 100 million tonnes of wastes
could be recycled to top-soil.
These wastes
would be "not-bio-unfriendly" (NBU) containing not only organic-origin
materials, but also dust, ash, small-particle and non-toxic
synthetics, decomposable synthetics, etc.
If that 100 million
tonnes of NBUs can be separated (which it can) and applied
to farm and forestry land within a controlled dispersion policy,
probably via deep clamp processing, then it will probably
absorb and hold for crop growth around 500 million tonnes
of rainfall. That is, a 500-billion litre (or 100-billion
gallon) reservoir, exactly where - but exactly where - we
need it. What's more, it took no energy expenditure to get
it there.
As a further
part on the energy balance, the nutrient values of recycling
these NBU materials will generally be around £8 to £10 per
composted tonne (which will be about 60 to 70% of the fresh
tonnage put into the process). That is about the tractor-and-man
cost to turn and spread the material. Farming would also be
saved maybe £600,000 expenditure on mineral fertiliser, mainly
imported and subject to much discussion from the environmentalists.
Twist in the Tale
Certain field
research has shown up a remarkable twist. When composting
materials that are largely carbonaceous, adding a nitrogen
source is possibly vital, but will, normally, at least, accelerate
the process. On farms, it is logical to use livestock slurries,
where available. This may have a plus in helping to reduce
pollution incidents from animal manure slurries.
An alternative
is to use sewage sludge, or more likely in future, bio-solids
cake.
Now, as it happens,
the Georgians (on the Black Sea) with some help from the USA,
have identified and isolated a whole new range of antibiotics.
They are derived from micro-phages. These micro-phages (wait
for it) were isolated from sewage.
Now this should
not be a surprise; where there are bad bugs, there are always
good bugs chasing them. And this could explain why some observant
sludge managers have reported that there is less crop disease
where there are regular dressings of bio-solids used as organic
fertiliser.
Final Piece
Now the jigsaw
begins to hang together to display a new vision. Recycling
municipal waste and bio-solids sludges to land with decentralised
processing will have enormous environmental and financial
advantages in fitting right into Agenda 21 (jobs in the countryside)
and political recycling targets.
BILL BUTTERWORTH
|