Direct Driller Magazine Issue 10

Page 87

IS MAGNESIUM THE MISSING LINK? Compelling reasons to take a good look at Mg levels in your soils and methods of raising them Written by Jon Williams from thesoilexpert.co.uk

The result of over 700 detailed soil samples in West Wales has consistently shown a shortage of magnesium with 70 per cent of the soils depleted on the clay colloid and 48 per cent showing a shortage in the available form, and unless we carry out a detailed soil analysis this major nutrient deficit cannot be corrected. Here we consider some of the possible reasons how we have come to this situation in UK soils. For the last 70 years we have focused on PH, available P, K, Mg and the fertiliser industry placed great emphasis on the P and K without consideration for the Mg (Ref Kirkby and Mengel 1976). There is now increasing evidence of the occurrence of magnesium deficiency symptoms showing up in crops and plants which will affect crop yield and quality. [1]

Soluble Mg fertiliser is a recent discovery

One of the reasons for this was that there was no soluble magnesium fertiliser available in the UK until 30 years ago when bulk powdered Keiserite Mg So4 arrived from a mined source of naturally occurring rock from Germany. However this was difficult to spread and sales of this soil amendment product did not take-off until a granular version arrived 20 years later, but still no manufactured compound fertilisers made in the UK contained Magnesium. Today Keiserite, magnesium sulphate and Magnesia Kanit 27%Na 11%K, 5% Mg, 12%S are available in the UK and both are approved for organic farms with derogation but there are still no compound fertilisers containing magnesium.

The role of Magnesium

Magnesium has a key role in the formation of chlorophyll and acts as the anchor for Nitrogen in every cell of chloroplast both of which help to create the dark green colour we associate with a healthy plant. However its major role is in enabling the phloem of the plant to easily transfer the products of photosynthesis, sugars down DIRECT DRILLER MAGAZINE

into the roots. A magnesium deficiency results in a plant with excessive leaf growth in relation to root growth and the sugars stuck in the leaf which makes the plant very light sensitive and reduces the potential of the plant to transfer Co2 via sugars to the roots and hence to the soil. As a main component of Chlorophyll it has a key role in the production of ATP the energy storehouse of the plant and activates more enzymes in the plant than any other nutrient. So magnesium is both a structural component of chlorophyll and needed for its bio-synthesis.

Soil analysis methodology

To make an accurate assessment of soil levels of magnesium as well as the other major nutrient calcium a detailed soil analysis is of paramount importance for a healthy aerobic living soil and good major nutrient balance and the important ratio of Ca/Mg established by Dr William Albrecht A healthy soil needs to have a total of 80 per cent of the clay colloid dominated by these two nutrients with the ratio being dependent on the soil texture for example a heavy clay soil having 68 per cent calcium and 12 per cent Magnesium. The detailed analysis will also provide the CEC (Cation Exchange Capacity), organic matter content and sulphate levels as well as the percentage sand, silt and clay content and so can be used as a management tool to bring balance and harmony to the living eco system which is the soil.

How to amend the soil levels?

The soil amendments of these major nutrients are based on the liming agents either Calcium Carbonate or Dolomitic limestone depending on the results found on the clay colloid and what the soil texture is in any particular soil. Where the levels of calcium and magnesium are low Dr Albrecht stated that the liming agent needs to be applied in volume as with bulk lime. Raising the levels of these two major

nutrients will optimise soil microbial life. However where levels are nearer to the optimum and for farmer convenience and easier spreading granular versions of these products are now available and so they can be used on an annual basis to keep soil levels at optimum for maximum yield continuously instead of letting levels drop and making amendments of these major nutrients every five years or so as was the practice in the past. However the situation on many farms is that Calcium levels are good and Magnesium levels low or very low. The only option in these circumstances is to provide essential magnesium using Keiserite Mg So4. When the Calcium levels fall the soil will need both calcium and magnesium, at which point it will benefit from the Ca and the Mg in Dolomitic lime which comes with a ratio of 2 parts Ca to 1 Mg. It must be noted that Keiserite supplies Magnesium in a soluble form and so will not build soil reserves on the clay colloid which is needed for optimum soil health.

Essential points to note

Ensuring that magnesium is at the optimum level for your soil type will enhance the availability of phosphorus and in particular locked-up phosphorus. Over 90 per cent of soil tests show P at very high levels. The shortage of magnesium may well be what has brought this situation about in the soils of West Wales. Releasing this phosphorus will increase the Brix index of the plant (sugar level) resulting in the plant having greater frost resistance and therefore a longer, more productive growth phase in every season. A detailed soil sample which guides us to the correct levels of these major nutrients is essential for efficient nitrogen use. This results in a reduction of the environmental impact of applying synthetic nitrogen fertiliser resulting in lower costs for the farmer and an environmental benefit: a win-win situation.

www.directdriller.co.uk 87


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Articles inside

Approach to Improving Soil Health

7min
pages 89-90

What to read?

6min
pages 98-100

US Cover Crop Information

4min
pages 91-93

Is Magnesium the Missing Link

8min
pages 87-88

Farmer Focus: Adam Driver

8min
pages 80-82

Farmer Focus: George Sly

8min
pages 83-84

Soil Workshops at the ORFC

15min
pages 85-86

Strategic Cereal Farm Week

8min
pages 70-73

It's all about biomass

2min
page 53

Organic Wheat Varieties Part 2

15min
pages 63-69

Farmer Focus: David White

6min
pages 60-62

Fertilisers fit for a Carbon-focused Future

12min
pages 42-45

Water in Focus: New Technologies

5min
pages 38-41

Farmer Focus: Andy Howard

5min
pages 36-37

Field Mulch Lab

9min
pages 46-47

New Horizons for Soil Research

11min
pages 18-23

Agronomy Service of the Future

18min
pages 30-35

Seed Breeding and a Sustainable Future

9min
pages 26-29

Featured Farmer: James Alexander

8min
pages 6-7

Farmer Focus: Neil White

7min
pages 24-25

Treating our soils like dirt

14min
pages 14-17

Path to Conservation Agriculture

6min
pages 12-13

Agricultural Ethics

10min
pages 8-11
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