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What are 3 ways farmers can help conserve the soil?

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What are 3 ways farmers can help conserve the soil?

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  1. If they aren't already,...they're not Farmers. Lol. Soil is the foundation of every farm.

    Add organic matter like cattle manure so the ground is more like a spounge. Leave hedges or trees along the laneways to shelter/protect the soil against wind/weather. Companion planting, different plants bring nutrients back into the soil(like "The Three Sisters").

    The list is long,...


  2. Soil conservation is a set of management strategies for prevention of soil being eroded from the earth’s surface or becoming chemically altered by overuse, salinization, acidification, or other chemical soil contamination. The principal approaches these strategies take are:

    choice of vegetative cover

    erosion prevention

    salinity management

    acidity control

    encouraging health of beneficial soil organisms

    prevention and remediation of soil contamination

    mineralization

    other ways are

    no till farming

    contour ploughing

    wind rows

    crop rotation

    the use of natural and man-made fertiliser

    resting the land

    Many scientific disciplines are involved in these pursuits, including agronomy, hydrology, soil science, meteorology, microbiology, and environmental chemistry.

    Decisions regarding appropriate crop rotation, cover crops, and planted windbreaks are central to the ability of surface soils to retain their integrity, both with respect to erosive forces and chemical change from nutrient depletion. Crop rotation is simply the conventional alternation of crops on a given field, so that nutrient depletion is avoided from repetitive chemical uptake/deposition of single crop growth.

    Cover crops serve the function of protecting the soil from erosion, weed establishment or excess evapotranspiration; however, they may also serve vital soil chemistry functions[1]. For example, legumes can be ploughed under to augment soil nitrates, and other plants have the ability to metabolize soil contaminants or alter adverse pH. The cover crop Mucuna pruriens (velvet bean) has been used in Nigeria to increase phosphorus availability after application of rock phosphate[2]. Some of these same precepts are applicable to urban landscaping, especially with respect to ground-cover selection for erosion control and weed suppression.



    Erosion barriers on disturbed slope, Marin County, CaliforniaWindbreaks are created by planting sufficiently dense rows or stands of trees at the windward exposure of an agricultural field subject to wind erosion[3]. Evergreen species are preferred to achieve year-round protection; however, as long as foliage is present in the seasons of bare soil surfaces, the effect of deciduous trees may also be adequate. Trees, shrubs and groundcovers are also effective perimeter treatment for soil erosion prevention, by insuring any surface flows are impeded. A special form of this perimeter or inter-row treatment is the use of a “grassway” that both channels and dissipates runoff through surface friction, impeding surface runoff, and encouraging infiltration of the slowed surface water[4].

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