Ben Bishop wrote:Hello!
I've heard some interesting research recently from a friend who works with Elaine Ingham. The theory is basically this: Nearly all of the minerals needed for proper plant growth with the exception of nitrogen and carbon can be found in an inorganic form in most soil types. To access these minerals, plants secrete specific types of root sugars at specific times to attract specific microbes that "mine" for whatever mineral that plant needs at that particular moment. In other words, by ensuring adequate compost and compost tea applications and fostering high microbial life, you will mitigate the need to supplement any type of mineral into the soil. What do you all think of this? I'm having trouble confirming the idea that magnesium, calcium, phosphorus, potassium, etc would be A.) present in a good balance in all soil types and B.) be abundant enough to support heavy-feeding plants. However, this theory makes sense to me and I want to believe it!
Here are my thoughts: "most soil types" is a very long way from "all soil types". A definition of "good balance" is called for. Abundant enough to support heavy feeding plants does not necessarily go along with "good balance" - inherent in the phrase "heavy feeding" is the idea that the plant is demanding in ways that go beyond an "average" sort of balance.
I expect that when you look at the
native plant life in an area - and we can go ahead and include non-native invasives for this exercise, because this is all about being successful - what you see growing well tells you a great deal about the soil. Lush growth, "heavy feeding" plants doing well - tells you that soil has lots of everything a plant needs. Looks like that sand dune, with some sparse grasses and only the hardy pioneers that can survive on practically nothing, well, they're surviving there on practically nothing
The plants that survive in a given place are doing exactly what is theorized - making the deals they need with the microbial life to get the minerals they need from the soil. But that does not mean the minerals are all present and well balanced, it means the plants growing there are adapted to what is available.
And it may be that there are more soil types, more soil conditions -however one chooses to phrase it - where there are sufficient minerals available for most plants, than there are soil types that are damagingly deficient in mineral availability.
I am not sure what that information means. Possibly that before we go adding minerals we might want to make sure we have adequate microbial populations and systems in place, as without them the plants may not be able to access the added minerals, and with them it may not be necessary to add the minerals after all.
I do not think that this information suggests there is no need for mineral supplementation, but rather that we may be turning to mineral supplementation prematurely and inappropriately in some cases.