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Soil Organic Matter and Biological Activity

Malcolm, R.E.(Edited by)Vaughan, D.(Edited by)
Part of the Developments in Plant and Soil Sciences series
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It has long been recognized that soil organic matter is the key to soil fertility.

As a nutrient store it gradually provides essential elements which the soil cannot retain for long in inorganic form.

It buffers growing plants against sudden changes in their chemical environment and preserves moisture in times of drought.

It keeps the soil in a friable, easily penetrated physical condition, well-aerated and free draining, providing young seedlings with an excellent medium for growth.

But it has another property, the nature and extent of which have been the subject of argu­ ment and controversy ever since scientists began to study the soil, and that is its ability to affect growth directly, other than by providing nutrient elements.

Any­ one wishing to learn about these effects has been faced with a daunting mass of literature, some confusing, often contradictory, and spread through a multitude of journals.

Individual aspects have been covered from time to time in reviews but there has obviously been a need for a modern authoritative text book dealing with the many facets of this subject, so the publication of this volume is timely.

The editors and authors are all specialists in their fields, fully familiar with the com­ plex nature of soil organic matter and with the particular difficulties arising in any study of its properties.

Where controversies exist they have presented all sides of the argument and have highlighted areas where further work is badly needed.

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£72.00
Product Details
Kluwer Academic Publishers
9024731542 / 9789024731541
Hardback
631.417
31/07/1985
Netherlands
469 pages, 9 Illustrations, black and white; XV, 469 p. 9 illus.
160 x 240 mm