This is part of a three-part blog Soil Carbon Curious series powered by our partners at Elemental Excelerator. Along with this educational series, PastureMap is working with Point Blue Conservation Science to integrate soil health data from California ranchers into the PastureMap platform.
So you’re soil carbon curious, and you’re committed to building soil carbon baseline data. One of the key questions our producers ask is - how can I make soil tests useful? You want your soil data to provide value to your management decisions. That means being able to track change over time and comparing soil data to each other over time.
At this moment, comparing and sharing soil carbon data is not easy. This is because the methodologies are so varying, and collection methods are so different. In an ideal data analyst’s world, we’d collect standardized data from each farm’s paddocks and make comparisons of grazing practices that increasing soil carbon. Unfortunately, nature is rarely standardized.
We interviewed Dr. Rebecca Ryals at UC Merced, one of the leading scientists who worked with Dr. Wendy Silver on soil carbon measurements at the Marin Carbon Project. Dr Ryals explains that there is quite a lot of variation and dispute in the scientific community for how to measure soil carbon stocks.
Maintaining similar sampling depth. Soil grows “up” if you’re building more organic matter. The Bulk Density method is the “classic” method of measuring % of carbon in a given sample, bulk density, and height of the sample. According to Dr. Rebecca Ryals, this approach is simple to measure in theory, but difficult in practice. As any soil farmer knows, bulk density, or how “fluffy” the soil is, varies widely. If grazing management practice is changing, the bulk density or “fluffiness” of the soil may also be changing. Tillage or no-till has a huge impact on the bulk density of the soil due to compaction. Furthermore, as soil builds, it tends to grow “up”, so it’s hard to compare apples to apples over a multi-year period. Dr. Ryals mentions the Equivalent Soil Mass method as a more promising approach, which doesn’t need bulk density, but uses the exact mass of soil in a sample(removing things like rocks), and compare the carbon stocks in that sample.
Carbon stocks may be changing further down than initially measured. It turns out that Mother Nature is doing work where we weren’t even looking. The work of Dr. Christine Jones, Midwest farmer Gabe Brown, the Land Institute, and others also support these findings. They have found over multiple years of measuring the top 30 cm of soil may be greatly underestimating the change in carbon stocks. Changes in soil carbon stocks have been measured as deep as 4-12 feet. This makes sense, as the roots of perennial grassland plants can get to 12 feet depth or more.
Different soil data collection tools give different results. A recent published study from the University of Alberta by graduate researcher Cole Gross showed that the tools of measurement of soil carbon stocks don’t give the same results. This means that soil carbon data may vary based on the collection method. The three common soil gathering methods are clod, core, or excavation. Clod is sending a clod of soil from your pasture surface or certain depth to a lab. Core sampling involves pounding a hollow tube into the soil to extract soil. Excavation involves digging a large soil pit and is the most accurate.
Don’t lose hope! Point Blue Conservation Science, PastureMap, and other organizations are building a future where soil carbon data can at least be shared with your team, your neighbor (maybe), and with like-minded folks in your community.
Our data visualization doesn't solve all the data challenges of soil health measurement, but it's a start. Here are other folks doing great work to make soil carbon data comparable and shareable.
We know that it’s difficult to talk to neighbors. But many of your neighbors are soil carbon curious but “too polite to ask”. Given the hyper-regional nature of grazing and soil data insights, your neighbors are the actually the most likely people in the world to benefit from your soil carbon insights. Consider sharing this Soil Carbon Curious series in your newsletter or Facebook / Instagram as a first step.
Know any other soil data sharing networks we should be aware of? Get in touch! Stay tuned for Part III of Soil Carbon Curious: when can farmers and ranchers get paid for sequestering soil carbon?