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[Preparation: composting
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growth |
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propogation | planting
trees | selecting
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indoor | soil | xeriscaping
]

| Soil - The unconsolidated mineral
and organic matter on the immediate surface of the earth
that serves as a natural medium for the growth or land
plants. |
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A desirable surface soil in
good condition for plant growth contains approximately 50%
solid material and 50% open or pore space. The mineral component
is usually made up of many different kinds and sizes of
particles, ranging from those visible to the unaided eye
to particles so small that they can only be seen with the
aid of a very powerful (electron) microscope. This mineral
material comprises about 45% to 50% of the total volume.
Organic material makes up about less then 5% of the volume
and may contain both plant and animal residues in varying
stages of decomposition. Under ideal or near-ideal moisture
conditions for growing plants, soil pore spaces contain
about 25% air and 25% water based on the total volume of
soil.
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Most Arizona soils developed under desert or scrub
vegetation. However, because of the wide variation in elevation
and climatic conditions found throughout the state there
are wide differences in the types of soil profiles found.
Interestingly only tropical soils are not found within Arizona.
The percentage of mineral matter and organic matter in a
cubic foot of surface soil varies from one soil to another,
and within the same soil. Most Arizona soils have very low
levels of organic matter, usually less than 1% by weight.
This is due to the slow rates of organic matter production
under arid conditions and the rapid rate of decomposition
of organic matter when the warm soils are moistened. Content
of organic matter is usually higher in soils that have not
been cultivated over long periods of time. Soils that are
tilled frequently or thoses with relatively small amounts
of plant residues are usually lower in organic matter. Plowing
and tilling the soil increases the amount of air in the
soil, which increases the rate of organic matter decomposition.
Soils with poor drainage or high water tables usually have
a higher organic matter content than those which are well
drained, because water excludes air from the soil mass.
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Since pore spacesare filled with either air or
water, the amount of air in a soil at a particular time
depends on the amount of water present in the pore spaces.
Immediately after a rain, there is more water and less air
in the pore spaces. Conversely, in dry periods, a soil contains
more air and less water. Increasing organic matter content
usually increases water-holding capacity, but adding undecomposed
organic material reduces water capacity until the material
has partially decomposed.
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Soil Horizons or Layers
Many soils have two or more distinct layers or horizons.
The principal horizons (collectively called the soil profile)
are: A, surface soil; E, the subsurface; and B, the subsoil.
Beneath the soil profile lies: C, the parent material; and
R, rock, which may be similar to that from which the soil
developed. Many soils in Arizona have developed in water-deposited
(alluvium), wind- deposited (aeolian silt or sand), or gravity
transported material (colluvium). When soil horizons are
present , they usually differfrom one another in color,
texture, consistency, and structure. In addition, there
are usually considerable differences in chemical characteristics
or composition.
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The surface and subsurface are usually
the coarsest layers. The surface soil contains more organic
matter than the other soil layers. Organic matter gives
a gray, dark-brown, or black color to the surface horizon,
the color imparted depending largely upon the amount of
organic matter present. Soils that are highest in organic
matter usually have the darkest surface colors. The surface
layer is usually most fertile and has the greatest concentration
of plant roots; plants obtain much of their nutrients and
water from the surface soil. Any human activity which removes
or degrades the surface soils is very serious considering
the relatively higher quality of this horizon.
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The subsoil layer is usually finer and
firmer than the surface soil. Organic matter content of
the subsoil is usually much lower than that of the surface
layer. The subsoil supports the surface soil and may be
considered the soil reservoir, providing storage space for
water and nutrients for plants, aiding in temperature regulation
of the soil, and supplying air for the roots of plants.
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The subsoil can also present serious problems
for those wanting to use the soil to grow plants. These
include coarse sandy or gravelly layers, hardpans or caliche
layers. Caliche is a specific type of naturally occurring
hardpan layer up to six feet thick which is cemented with
calcium carbonate. Corse sandy or gravel layers are droughty
and may not supply adequate moisture for growing plant roots.
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The bottom horizon, or parent material,
is decomposed rock or other transported material that has
acquired some characteristics of the subsoil and retained
some characteristics of the rock or other geological material
from which it weathered. It is not hard, like rock, but
may show the form or structure of the original rocks or
layering if it is in a water-laid deposit. The parent material
influences soil texture, natural fertility, rate of decomposition
(and thus rate of soil formation), alkalinity, depth, and
in some cases, topography (or lay of the land) on which
the soil is formed.
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More information from the Master Gardener Manual 
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1998 The University of Arizona. All contents copyrighted. All rights
reserved. |
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