What is Compost?
Composting is a degradation process brought about by bacteria and
fungus organisms. Large amounts of organic kitchen, garden, lawn,
and/or farm refuse can be reduced in a relatively short time to
a pile of black, crumbly humus which makes an ideal soil conditioner.
Compost added regularly to soil will certainly benefit the soil.
The soil's structure will improve, since humus contains substances
which cause aggregation (sticking together) of soil particles.
In a clay soil this means that the microscopic individual particles
will be clumped together and more air spaces will be opened up between
clumps. Without these air spaces the clay particles stick tightly to
each other, forming a nearly impenetrable barrier to water and gases.
This is why clay is so sticky when it is wet and hard when dry.
In sandy soils, the large sand particles are clumped with humus too,
the humus adding its nutrient- and moisture-holding capacity.
Normally, water and nitrogen fertilizers leach quickly from sandy
soil, making it necessary to add them frequently.
A less widely recognized benefit from compost is that it contains
humic and other organic acids which help to degrade compounds naturally
present in the soil into the simpler form that plants use. These elements,
or ions, can then be held by the humus particles, which contain many ion
exchange sites on their surfaces. The ions are released into soil
water, and plant roots are able to take them up.
Because there are so many ion exchange sites on humus particles,
humus increases the buffering capacity of the soil. This condition
helps to prevent rapid leaching of lime and nutrients as well as
reducing the effects of over-liming and over-fertilizing. For example,
when a soil's pH is increased too much by adding too many wood ashes,
the most economical way to correct the condition is generally to
add compost, which will absorb (take up on the surface) the extra
ions that produce the high pH. (compost itself is somewhat acid
because of the acidic products made by microorganisms.) In other
words, compost buffers the effects of other soil additives.
Compost and other organic matter turns the soil dark brown or blackish
and increases heat-absorbing capabilities to a small extent.
Compost reduces soil erosion because it allows water to percolate
into lower soil layers, rather than puddle on top and then run off.
This quality also reduces crusting of soil. Compost provides food for
earthworms, soil insects, and microorganisms, many of which will,
over the years, help balance the populations of less desirable soil
fauna. Mycorrhizal fungi, which have been proven to benefit plants
through their association with plant roots, are also prolific in high
humus soil. Finally, the products from the breakdown of plant and
animal refuse contain many fertilizing elements in and of themselves,
including trace elements not available from commonly used synthetic
fertilizers.
|