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Saturday, August 20, 2016

The Hidden Community (Part 2 of 2)

Have a look at your lawn. Under the immaculate grass is an invisible world, the soil community. Your yard, like millions of others, is home to an amazing assortment of critters. Most of them you will never see. They range in size from microscopic bacteria and fungi to macroscopic moles and gophers. Each plays its own important role in maintaining ecological balance.

Many soil organisms play a key role in several mineral cycles, including the carbon cycle and nitrogen cycle. I don’t want to say any one organism is more important than any other because they are all cogs on the same great wheel of life, but if I had to I would assign that title to nitrogen-fixing bacteria. These little guys have a symbiotic relationship with plants that allows plants to absorb nitrogen, which is critical to their growth and development. And we all know plants are critical for everything else that’s alive.

Decomposers such as fungi and bacteria consume dead plant and animal material. In doing so, they return carbon and other nutrients that had been locked up in dead material to the soil where it is absorbed by plants and becomes life again.

Below is a chart of a simplified soil food web.



Other soil organisms like earthworms and moles aerate the soil with their tunnels. The tunnels allow for easier movement by air and water, benefiting plants and animals alike. Moles might be ruining your perfect lawn by making look not so nice, but they are actually making it healthier by doing some free landscape work.
Again, information is courtesy of my soil science textbook Soil Science and Management by Edward Plaster.
Did you know? Mushrooms are actually the fruiting bodies of fungi. The “body” of a fungus is actually a collection of long, thread-like cells that can be very compact or quite large. (Thanks to University of California Museum of Paleontology, http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/fungi/fungimm.html)
The largest organism in the world is in fact a fungus. It lives in Oregon and is estimated at 1900 to 8650 years old. It covers 2385 acres in Malheur National Forest of eastern Oregon and is known as the Humongous Fungus. (US Forest Service, http://www.fs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_DOCUMENTS/fsbdev3_033146.pdf)              

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