| welfarehill - 12/4/2024 08:48
No doubt. I can't put my finger on this biological activity part. But if the base sat K goes up, so does noticeable fungal activity. Only certain soil types respond to the high management. The land grants are way behind on potassium stuff but I don't know what I'm doing either. The common denominator in my high yield zones was higher base sat K. All inputs respond better in those zones. Maybe its more carbon cycling.
I believe it's much more likely that your fungi levels are driving your K levels not your K levels driving your fungi. Your areas with high population of microbes are making more nutrients available. |