What Is a Super Soil Food Web & How Can It Benefit Your Garden?

Even if you’re a long-time organic gardener, you may never have heard of a “super soil food web,” and how it can benefit your garden. Here are some tips for how to build one yourself, and what it can do for your garden.

First of all, it’s important to understand what a soil food web is. Basically, it includes all of the microorganisms, insects, animals, and plants, that interact together to make healthy soil.

Here is a more detailed description from The High Performance Garden Show:

The soil food web is made up of an incredible diversity of organisms. They range in size from the tiniest one-celled bacteria, algae, fungi, and protozoa, to the more complex nematodes and micro-arthropods, to the visible earthworms, insects, small vertebrates, and plants. As these organisms eat, grow, and move through the soil, they make it possible to have clean air, water, healthy plants, and moderated water flow.

This quick video explains a bit more about how it works:

Still a little confused? Let’s dive in a little deeper:

To learn more about how the soil food web works we will begin with the plants.

Plants take in sunlight and create carbohydrates and proteins, some of this is excreted through the roots to the area around the roots, known as the rhizosphere.

Bacteria and fungi are attracted to the rhizosphere to eat those sloughed off cells from the roots. Those bacteria and fungi are eaten by protozoa and nematodes. The nutrients that the bacteria and fungi no longer need are released as nutrients for the plants in the rhizosphere.

The protozoa and nematodes are eaten by spiders, moths, flies, grasshoppers, butterflies and other insects. Those insects are then eaten by animals. The earthworms in the soil eat bacteria, fungi, protozoa and nematodes.

If you have a healthy worm population you have a healthy soil food web! All of the dead organisms are eaten by the bacteria and fungi which add nutrients back to the soil.

All of the eating and decomposing produces byproducts of nutrients that feed the plants.

The soil food web is a delicate structure. If one of the players is removed from the game then the food web can be disrupted and not work.

So, what can disrupt the soil food web?

It may not come as a surprise that chemical fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides can do HUGE damage to the soil food web.

The best thing that you can do for your garden is to keep it in harmony with nature, and free of all chemicals and fertilizers.

A garden that hosts a healthy soil food web is a successful, productive and incredibly nutrient rich garden!

To get the full scoop on the super soil food web, and how you can build one in your garden, watch the entire High Performance Garden Show episode for free online by clicking the link below!

In this episode, they will build a soil food web in a raised container garden that is free of weed seeds and has the nutrition that it needs to flourish and produce loads of delicious, nutritious organic veggies.

Get Free Access Now…

 

Rose S.

An avid gardener since childhood, I love sharing my passion for gardening with others! I have gardened in a number of different climates and settings, from large fenced garden plots, to tiny patio and container gardens, and I firmly believe that everyone can learn to grow at least some of their own food - no matter where you live. Growing your own food can help you take control of your own health and food supply, and there has never been a better time to get started!


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