| Missouri Environment and Garden |
Volume 11, No. 3 |
| News for Missouri's Gardens, Yards and
Resources |
March 2005 |
Soil Testing for Better Lawns & Gardens
Spring is the time when people are getting ready to
work on their lawns and gardens to have an impressive,
green, weed-free, healthy lawn, and a beautiful and
colorful flower garden; not to mention a productive and
rewarding vegetable garden. Maybe you want to show
up the neighbors and have the greenest lawn or most
beautiful and colorful landscaping on the block. What
kind of fertilizer do you need, if any? Well, a good place
to start would be MU's Soil and Plant Testing Lab.
The University of Missouri Soil & Plant testing lab,
sponsored by University Extension, provides services
in soil, plant, water, greenhouse media and compost
analyses for farmers, homeowners, vegetable and fruit
growers, golf course managers, greenhouse managers,
lawn and landscape specialists, government and state
agencies and Agra industries. The lab ensures reliable
results and unbiased nutrient recommendations are given
to farmers and homeowners in order to grow a good crop
or healthy lawn without polluting the environment.
Soil testing is a gardener's best guide to the wise and
efficient use of fertilizer and soil amendments. A soil test
is like taking an inventory of the nutrients available to
plants. Which are too high, too low or just right? While
plant growth may offer clues to nutrient availability, a
gardener won't precisely know until they test their soil.
Although soil-testing kits are available in garden centers,
laboratory testing is more reliable and the results from
laboratories are accompanied with interpretations and
recommendations.
Why do soil testing?
Soil fertility fluctuates throughout the growing season
each year. The quantity and availability of mineral
nutrients are altered by the addition of fertilizers,
manure, compost, mulch and lime or sulfur, in addition
to leaching. Furthermore, large quantities of mineral
nutrients are removed from soils as a result of plant
growth and development and the harvesting of crops.
The soil test will determine the current fertility status.
It also provides the necessary information needed to
maintain the optimum fertility year after year.
Some plants grow well over a wide range of soil pH,
while others grow best within a narrow range of pH.
Most turfgrasses, flowers, ornamental shrubs, vegetables
and fruits grow best in slightly acid soils which represent
a pH of 6.0 to 7.0. Plants such as rhododendron, azalea,
pieris, mountain laurel and blueberries require a more
acidic soil to grow well. A soil test is the only precise
way to determine whether the soil is acidic, neutral or
alkaline.
The soil test takes the guesswork out of fertilization
and is extremely cost effective. It not only eliminates
the waste of money spent on unnecessary fertilizers, but
also eliminates over-usage of fertilizers, which helps to
protect the environment.
When Do I Soil Test?
Soil samples can be taken in the spring or fall for
established sites. Although fall and early spring are
typical times to test soil, one can really do it any time the
soil is not frozen, but don't sample after recent fertilizer
or lime applications.
For new sites, soil samples can be taken anytime
when the soil is workable. Most people conduct their soil
tests in the spring. However, fall is a preferred time to
take soil tests if one wants to avoid the spring rush and
suspects a soil pH problem. Fall soil testing will allow
you ample time to apply lime to raise the soil pH. Sulfur
should be applied in the spring if the soil pH needs to
be lowered. Garden soils should be tested every two to
three years.
Soil testing is strongly recommended when
establishing a new lawn, renovation of an existing
lawn or landscaping. The cost of soil testing is minor
in comparison to the cost of seed, plants and labor.
Correcting a problem before planting is much simpler
and cheaper than afterwards. Once your yard is
established, continue to take periodic soil samples.
Routine fertilizer or lime applications can result in
excessive soil nutrient levels or deleterious soil pH. For
example, many fertilizers tend to lower soil pH, and after
several years of fertilization, the pH may drop below
desirable.
Customers can have their soil tested to determine
what is needed to grow a specific plant or crop. A plant
analysis can be used to diagnose a nutrient deficiency
or toxicity problem or monitor the nutritional status
of a plant. The latter is important for perennial plants,
especially fruit crops and landscaping trees.
The test results are only as good as the sample taken.
It is extremely important to provide a representative
sample to the testing lab so that a reliable test and
recommendations can be made for the entire area. This
can be accomplished by submitting a composite sample.
A good representative composite sample from a garden
or lawn should contain eight to 10 cores or slices. Each
core or slice should be taken at the same depth (zero to
six inches) and volume at each site. Sample at random
in a zigzag pattern over the area and mix the sample
together in a clean plastic bucket. More samples should
be taken if the area was recently limed or fertilized.
Separate samples need to be taken from lawns, gardens,
flowerbeds or shrub borders. Separate samples should
be taken from areas with distinctive soil types or plant
performances.
Testing your soil for nutrients and pH is important to
provide balanced application of nutrients, while avoiding
over application. At University of Missouri Soil Testing
Laboratory, we offer a regular fertility test that includes
measurements of pH, lime requirement, organic matter,
available phosphorus, potassium, calcium, magnesium
and cation exchange capacity.
Soil pH greatly influences plant nutrient availability.
Adjusting pH often corrects the nutrient problem
for most plants. The optimum pH for most plants is
between 6.0 and 7.0. The lime requirement measurement
indicates the amount of amendment (usually lime)
necessary to correct a pH problem. Organic matter has
several roles in the soil; generally the more organic
matter the better. Nitrogen recommendations are based
on the organic matter level. Phosphorus, potassium,
calcium and magnesium are all essential plant nutrients.
For the layman, a cation exchange capacity (CEC) value
has no meaning, but it is a measure of the soil's ability to
hold nutrients.
Test costs vary according to the number of nutrients
tested. The University of Missouri Soil Testing
Laboratory charges $10.00 (when submitting directly to
the lab) for a regular fertility test. Several other specific
analyses are available. These include but are not limited
to soil analysis for sulfur, micro-nutrients (Zinc, Iron,
Copper, Manganese, Boron), salt content (electrical
conductivity) and soil texture. Test reports provide
interpretation and nutrient recommendations. The
turnaround time for a soil test is 24 hours. Customers
have to add mailing time to get the reports by regular
mail services. For plant, water, greenhouse media and
compost tests, the turnaround time is within five working
days.
You can contact your Regional Agronomy/
Horticulture/Natural Resources Specialist or local
Extension Office to obtain Sample Information Forms
and sample boxes and can submit samples through
their offices. The Regional Specialists at your local
Extension Offices can be a source of information for
interpreting and personalizing your soil test reports and
recommendations. Samples can be submitted directly
to the University of Missouri Soil Testing labs at 23
Mumford Hall, Columbia, MO 65211 (Tel: 573-882-
0623).
The lab maintains a comprehensive Web site at
http://www.soiltest.psu.missouri.edu. The site includes
information on how to collect soil and plant samples
and how and where to submit samples. The Web site
provides a list of services provided by the lab, costs of
tests, sample information forms, location of the lab and
other relevant information. Now the lab also provides
web access of soil test results with a specifically
assigned password to clients upon request. We also have
the option for electronic mailing of data if
required. Customers can drop off their
samples in person at 23 Mumford
Hall, mail them in, or drop them
off at their County University
Extension offices.
Dr. Manjula Nathan
Director MU Soil Testing & Plant
Diagnostic Service Labora- Laboratories
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