MAXIMIZE and minimize; Two Principles for Managing Soil Health.

Two knobs "Photosynthesis" and "Tillage"

Soil health management can be distilled to two principles:

  1. Maximize photosynthesis
  2. Minimize tillage

These are principles; they do not tell you what practices you should use, but rather what the practices you choose to implement should provide.

Maximizing photosynthesis is all about interception of sunlight to power plant growth.

Fill the space you have with plant growth. Aim for a full-time, full canopy as much as possible.

Fill the time you have with plant growth, year-round plant growth, although I doubt we could tell if you missed a couple weeks over the course of a year.

Filling time and space will require a soil with sufficient nutrients, optimum pH, and structure conducive to seedling emergence and to root growth, which brings us to the second principle.

Minimizing tillage is all about maintaining soil structure and keeping the soil protected from erosion. Tillage damages soil structure and reduces protective residue cover.

When both principles are followed, you get the five soil health principles and practices from NRCS, regenerative agriculture, and others:

  1. Keep soil covered as much as possible. This is achieved by combining the Max and min principles.
  2. Minimize soil disturbance. Tillage is the primary culprit in disturbing the soil, hence the min principle.
  3. Keep plants growing year-round. This is one way to accomplish the Max principle.
  4. Use cover crops and crop rotation. These practices also accomplish the Max principle.
  5. Integrate livestock grazing. This practice allows more flexibility in applying the Max and min principles, allows the use of perennials, and reduces tillage.

The Max and min principles together produce a soil with the organic matter concentrated at the soil surface, where it can do the most good.

The flow of carbon through the soil is nearly continuous, both from plants and from decaying crop residue.

In the long-term, and sometimes in the short-term, these two principles should address real soil problems.

These principles fit with the current views of soil organic matter and soil biology.

Cover crops, either monoculture or mixtures, can be used with cash crops to maximize photosynthesis. Achieving the Max principle in annual crops will be easier with crop rotation.

Green manures show the trade-off between the two principles; photosynthesis is maximized by producing big biomass, but tillage is involved. Green manures can, it seems, provide benefits in some cropping systems that cannot be achieved with practices that abide by both principles. However, a sufficient amount of biomass must be produced for them to be beneficial.

Minimizing tillage is much easier with herbicides. They are the easy choice over tillage and have little if any effect on soil biology.

Finally, these two principles can incorporate the essentials of sustaining agriculture production. And these principles assume that erosion, which is the opposite of building soil, is minimized. You cannot build health into a soil that is being eroded.

Of course, it’s not simple. These principles must be adjusted for many factors: climate, markets, economics, crops, pests, soils, regulations, equipment, technology, etc. and all the inherent trade-offs of agriculture. Perhaps “optimize” would be better. Within these principles, there is lots of room for creativity and innovation.

That’s it, two principles.

Here is a partial list of practices for each principle.

Practices that Help Maximize Photosynthesis:

Practices that Help Minimize Tillage, in descending order of effectiveness:

Relay crops
No-till/Direct seeding
Cover crops
Strip-till
Perennial crops
Vertical tillage
Overwintering crops and cover crops
Non-inversion tillage
Manure/compost, imported photosynthesis

Practices that facilitate the above practices:

Practices that facilitate the above practices:

Livestock grazing
Livestock grazing
Crop rotation
Crop rotation
Nutrient management
Residue management
Pest management
Weed management
Irrigation
No-till, strip-till, practices that reduce field prep time between crops

Comments

6 comments on "MAXIMIZE and minimize; Two Principles for Managing Soil Health."
    1. Hi Bekka,
      Thanks for the comment. Weeds are often killed with tillage. Without tillage, herbicides are the usual and easier to manage choice. There are non-herbicide options available but they can be more expensive, more difficult to manage, or they only work with specific cropping systems.

  1. Hi Andrew, I’m a fan of your writing and thinking! Still reeling from that Regenerative brouhaha from a few years ago…? Or that all in a day’s work for you? I cannot believe how much work you did to carry on that “discussion.”
    Do you have thoughts on, or can you recommend information resources on whether or not it is realistic (with adoption of all of the above practices, and maybe more) to cause there to be a net increase in soil carbon storage? I’ve heard people talk about this like it’s the biggest no-brainer in the world. I’m not convinced, but I am not up on the latest thoughts on this. I’m just always amazed at how people talk about all of this- it’s the way in which they talk about it that reveals how little they actually know about agriculture.
    Thanks, and keep up the great work!

    1. Andy, thanks for the comments. Yes, definitely, net increases in soil C storage are possible. It often depends on the starting point. Here in our previously arid but now irrigated soils, just the addition of water and high yield, high residue crops like wheat and corn, and perennials like alfalfa have increased soil C levels above native levels. In other regions, it depends on what you take as the baseline. Using prairie native soils as a baseline it will be hard to match, but with no-till and cover crops and a decent rotation, I think soil C levels can increase.

  2. Yield Benefits of Crop Rotation: Crop Diversity or Active Crop Time? | CSANR | Washington State University says:

    […] line with the regenerative agriculture principle, “maintain living roots in soil” and with “maximize photosynthesis and minimize tillage.” Increased active crop time may also produce more stable crop yields (Sanford et al. […]

  3. […] of soil health can be reduced to these two principles. The rest is figuring out the details, and how to do it while making a […]

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