![]() | Better Farming Series 04 - The Soil: How the Soil is Made up (FAO - INADES, 1976, 37 p.) |
![]() | ![]() | Living creatures in the soil |
![]() |
|
There are a lot of worms in the soil.
If we put together all
the worms living in a hectare of soil (in a football field), they would make a
big heap and would weigh as much as two oxen.
Worms eat the remains of plants
that are mixed with the earth.
Worms also eat a lot of earth.
You often
see on the surface of the soil the little heaps of earth that worms have
left.
Worms make a lot of holes in the soil.
Worms improve the soil
structure.
By making holes and by eating earth, worms mix humus, sand, silt
and clay. They work the soil like the farmer with his hoe.
So worms are very
useful in the
soil.
Rats, rabbits and lots of other animals dig big holes.
These
animals eat roots, young stems and leaves.
They are not
useful.
Termites destroy dead plants.
They make holes in dead
plants.
For instance, they destroy wood.
Part of the organic matter
remains on the spot, mixes with the soil and produces humus.
The rest is
taken away by the termites to their nests.
Termites bring up fine
earth.
They go deep into the soil to get fine earth.
They bring it up to
make their nests.
When a nest is destroyed, the fine earth is mixed with the
cultivated layer. This layer becomes deeper.
But termite nests are sometimes
very big and very hard. They are a nuisance to the
farmer.
In the soil there are also many other insects such as ants and
caterpillars.
These insects disturb the soil as worms do and decompose
organic matter.
Certain insects eat leaves or roots and kill the
plants.
Insects, both good and bad, change the
soil.
We saw that there are very many microbes in the soil.
Some
microbes change organic matter into humus.
Other microbes bring nitrogen to
plants.
We know that leaves get carbon from the air (see Booklet No. 2, page
21).
There is also nitrogen in the air. To grow, plants need nitrogen. But
leaves cannot take nitrogen from the air.
In the soil there are microbes that
can take the nitrogen in the air for their own food.
When these microbes die,
they remain in the soil and decompose.
The microbes' nitrogen is changed into
mineral salts.
The roots of plants can absorb these mineral salts through
their root hairs (see Booklet No. 1).
Everywhere in the soil there are
microbes that Can take in nitrogen.
Some of them gather on plant roots where
they form little beads, or nodules.
The microbes in these little beads bring
nitrogen to the plants.
Not all plants have these little beads.
They are
found only on plants of the legume family.
Groundnuts, Dolichos bean,
Crotalaria, beans, peas, Stylosanthes are all legumes.
Groundnut
plant