hau Davis, First I need to say that I respect John's work very much and my opinion is that he and I are saying the same things, just a bit differently.
His plant pyramid includes all the important pieces of the plant growth cycles and he too promotes soil bio health and diversity of microorganisms.
If you notice, he has separated nutrients from the microbiosphere in his diagram, that can lead people to believe that fertilizers work without an active, diverse microbiome filled with organisms.
It is impossible for this to work well, in the plant world, plants use exudates to call for microorganisms to come and do the processing of the raw nutrients so the plants can take these in and recombine them into amino acids and other compounds needed for plant health and growth.
When he gets to his level 3 and level 4 of his pyramid, now he brings up the microbiome but he seems to think that these are most important for disease and pest control. (my take on his diagraming and explanations)
If you read through my soil series, you will find that I place the majority of importance on the organisms that populate the microbiome in the soil.
This is because it is the organisms of this realm that break rocks into individual minerals through their use of enzymes.
Other members of the microbiome (especially the fungi groups) serve not only as infiltrators of these nutrients but they also provide the pathways other organisms use to travel to the plant that expelled the exudate(s).
That means that in order for true nutrition to occur within the plant, the organisms have to not only be present but they have to do their job of breaking down raw materials into plant consumables then either the bacteria or the fungi will transport these plant consumables into the roots.
From there the plant takes over and moves the nutrients up the phylum to where ever they are needed at that time.
If you follow his pyramid exactly, you are fairly putting the cart before the horse so to speak.
In most soils, almost all the needed nutrients are going to be present but they are bound up in compounds, it is the organisms of the microbiome that do the work of breaking out exactly what the plant calls for through the use of exudates and nano electrical signals.
Almost every plant tested for mycorrhizae have had both endo and ecto mycorrhizae around and in the
root system.
With out these very important players, many of the micro nutrients would not be able to get to the parts of the plant where they are needed for proper plant functions.
While it looks neat and tidy in his diagram, he really needs some lines from each section to all the other sections since life doesn't work the way most diagrams make us believe.
My personal findings from my research are showing that every tiny part of any plant growth or defense mechanism is dependent upon all the other tiny parts happening in concert.
Building the soil is the key to being able to grow truly nutritious food plants for our consumption, if you haven't built the soil prior to planting either transplants or seeds, you are not going to be able to grow a "complete" food stuff.
Can you use fertilizers to make sure the base nutrients are present in the soil? Sure you can, but they won't go anywhere without that all important microbiome being in place.
One of the prime uses of
compost teas is to get a coating of the microbiome organisms on the exterior of the plant.
If you are going to do this by using a spray on the foliage, just be sure to try and keep it off the underside of the leaves so you don't give suffocation an opportunity.
I spray the trunks of my
trees, the base of all the vegetable plants and some times the fruits (like melons and gourds) this puts some organisms where they need to be without endangering the stomata of the plant leaves.
I also drench the soil around every plant with both micro nutrients and micro organisms, especially the mycorrhizae around the roots at planting time.
When it comes to the nasty critter we know as squash bugs, the massive numbers that survived the almost non existent winter last year have proven to be able to overcome the microbiome organisms I provided my own plants with this year.
My solution will be to fight them over this winter as they hibernate under the soil surface by boosting all of the microbiome I can.
Beneficial nematodes are one of the prime destroyers of these bugs when they are under the surface of the soil.
Redhawk