United States Department of Agriculture - Agricultural Research Service
Northwest Irrigation & Soils Research Lab, Kimberly, ID
Nutrient Cycling
in the Soil-Plant-Animal System
Figure 1. Nutrient (elemental) cycling
in the soil-plant-animal system (adapted from N.C. Brady, The Nature
and Properties of Soils, 10th ed., p. 353, 1990, Macmillan
Publ. Co., New York). Primary minerals are the geologic parent materials
of a soil or the original rocks of the Earth's crust, for example lava.
Secondary minerals have been transformed by weathering processes into clay
or silt. The circling nature of the process shows the interaction among
soil, plants, animals, microbes, and soluble nutrients. The ultimate source
of the "mineral" elements is the soil. For example, at any one time 98
to 99% of the phosphorus is associated with primary or secondary minerals
and soil organic matter. About 1 to 2 % is in microbial tissue, and only
0.01% exists as soluble phosphorus. Elements are removed from the system
by harvest and removal of plant and animal products, wind or water runoff
(erosion), and to a lesser extent by water movement deep into the soil
forming ground water flow. Note: this is a simplified and generic cycle,
but certain elements such as nitrogen have more complex systems.