Festive season’s eating starts with soil
Festive season’s eating starts with soil
For the
countless cooks poring over the recipe books in search of
the perfect Christmas menu, here’s a sobering thought. No
soil, no sumptuous spread. So with World Soil Day being
celebrated on 5 December Ballance Agri-Nutrients Science
Strategy Manager Warwick Catto says it’s time for a little
thanks from the ground up.
“Good food starts with great soil, yet it is something we all take for granted. It’s not sexy. It’s dirt when it’s in the wrong place and it’s the last think you want to find in your salad. But when you consider that all life on earth depends on soil, we would be in serious trouble without it.
“It can take at least 500 years to create just 2.5 cm of topsoil from rocks, so World Soil Day is a good time to say thanks to Mother Nature for the hard work and to all those farmers, growers and the backyard gardeners who work with soil every day to keep families fed.”
Mr Catto says New Zealand’s economy owes a significant share of its performance to soil with almost half New Zealand’s land mass farmed and the Ministry of Primary Industries forecasting that the primary sector could generate more than $35 billion in earnings in the coming year.
“Soil is integral to our economic success, but we need to look after it. It is not a ‘one size fits all’ blanket. The natural fertility of soils and our soil types vary around New Zealand, so responsible use of fertilisers is important to balance nutrients in the soil for plant and animal growth.”
Mr Catto says World Soil Day is a reminder that impacts such as erosion, carbon loss and urban expansion over farmland need to be managed carefully, especially in an agriculturally-dependent economy such as New Zealand’s.
“If soil becomes degraded, water washes right through it, the available nutrients cannot support healthy plant growth and productivity is lost. We should thank our best producers who focus on the quality of their soil first and we’re working alongside them. It’s a fine balance between nutrient use and nutrient loss, so our goal is not to sell more fertiliser, but to supply enough to maintain sustainable soil health.”
He says cooks planning the Christmas menu might want to add a little side dish of soil.
“It’s a good reminder of where great food comes from and a sobering reminder of where we would be without it.”
The Dirt on
Soil[i]
· All life on earth depends on
soil.
· Soil and dirt are not the same.
·
The New Zealand Soil Classification (the system used to
identify and name soils) defines soil as any natural
material on the land’s surface that has the potential to
support life, even if that is only bacteria.
·
Soil scientists point out the difference between soil and
dirt. Soil is a natural material in its proper place, but
dirt is soil in the wrong place, such as on one’s shoes or
car.
· Soil performs vital functions in our
ecosystems.
· The soil stores reserves of water
for plants, controls water seepage into streams and
groundwater, and reduces rapid runoff that could cause
erosion and floods.
· The soil stores carbon (in
New Zealand, it stores about four times more than plants),
so it helps minimise the release of carbon dioxide into the
air.
· Soil microbes help absorb nitrogen from
the air and feed it to plants. Nutrients are released as the
rock fragments decay.
· Soil filters water, and
helps absorb and break down toxins.
· Soils link
natural systems above ground – plants, animals, landforms,
surface water and the atmosphere – with natural systems
below ground, such as rocks and groundwater.
ends