Humates and Humic Acid
Humate materials: their effects and use as soil amendments
By T.A. Obreza, R. G. Webb and R. H. Biggs
Humate
materials are widely distributed organic carbon containing compounds found in
soils, fresh water, and oceans. These substances are formed from the biological
and chemical breakdown of animal and plant life, and make up approximately 75
percent of the organic matter that exists in most mineral soils. Humates play a
direct role in determining the production potential of a soil.
The importance of organic matter in soil is not a recent discovery. Soil fertility in early agricultural systems was based on the recycling of organic wastes, and the addition of decomposed organic materials improved plant growth. The rise in popularity and use of mineral fertilizers enabled growers to directly supply plant nutrients to the soil, and rapid growth in agricultural productivity occurred. As a consequence, the importance of soil organic matter was somewhat neglected. In Florida, organic matter should be considered as very important due to the sandy nature of the soil. In soils void of significant quantities of clay minerals and organic matter, the addition of humates can have an impact on soil fertility which may be noticeable in the form of improved plant growth.
Effects on Soil Fertility. Native soil humic substances enhance
plant growth both directly and indirectly. Physically, they promote good soil
structure and increase the water holding capacity of the soil. Biologically,
they affect the activities of microorganisms. Chemically, they serve as an
adsorption and retention complex for inorganic plant nutrients. Nutritionally,
they are sources of nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur for plants and
microorganisms. All of these effects increase the productivity of the soil.
Commercially-available humic substances added to the soil do not
directly contribute significant quantities of nutrients to plants in modern
agriculture at the rates normally applied. However, indirect effects of these
materials on soil fertility can be significant. Micronutrients, especially
iron, may be made more available to plants in the presence of humates.
Inorganic iron compounds are very unstable in soil and tend to become insoluble
and unavailable, especially in calcareous soils. Humate compounds can
incorporate iron into chelated complexes, maintaining its availability to
plants, although still in insoluble form.
Soil phosphates are often immobilized through reactions with iron
and aluminum, which in turn may be complexed with organic matter. Chelating
agents can break the iron or aluminum bonds between the phosphate and organic
matter, releasing phosphate ions into solution. This dissolution is a process
which occurs in soil in the presence of naturally-occurring humic substances or
plant root exudates. The addition of humates may increase the rate of this
process, thereby increasing the availability of phosphorus to plants.
Applied pesticides substantially interact with soil humic substances, but the
reactions are complex. Some pesticides may be immobilized by humates and can
practically disappear from the soil environment. In this case, humic substances
can be very effective in removing excess pesticide from sandy soils very low in
organic matter. The most common reaction between pesticides and humates is
adsorption, followed by a release to the soil solution at a rate dependent on
the chemical structure of the pesticide. Degradation of the pesticide will be
determined in part by the rate of release. Humic substances may be used in this
case to control the concentration of pesticide in the soil solution, and to
avoid toxicity hazards. A third case involves the mobility of pesticides by
humic material. Some groups of compounds can form complexes with humates, which
can then be absorbed by plant roots.
Effects on Plants. Humic acids can have a direct positive effect
on plant growth in a number of ways. They have been shown to stimulate seed
germination of several varieties of crops. Both plant root and top growth have
been stimulated by humates, but the effect is usually more prominent in the
roots. A proliferation in root growth, resulting in an increased efficiency of
the root system, is a likely cause of higher plant yields seen in response to
humic acid treatment.
Humic matter has been shown to increase the uptake of
nitrogen by plants, and to increase soil nitrogen utilization efficiency. It
can also enhance the uptake of potassium, calcium, magnesium and phosphorus.
Chlorosis in plants has been prevented or corrected by humate application,
probably the result of the ability of humate to hold soil iron in a form which
can be assimilated. This phenomenon can be particularly effective in alkaline,
calcareous soils, which are normally deficient in available iron and low in
organic matter content.
Effect of Management Practices on Soil Organic Matter.
Cultivation of soils usually causes a decrease in the organic matter content.
Rather than being completely destroyed, the organic matter in the soil tends to
reach a new, lower equilibrium level. For most soils, a high level of organic
matter is maintained only by grass species. Grass middles between citrus tree
rows can help maintain higher organic matter in the portion of the citrus tree
root zone that extends into them. However, the establishment of clean herbicide
bands within three rows to facilitate harvesting and other operations may
decrease the organic matter content in what is normally the major area of tree
root concentration and fertilizer application.
Conventional sources of
applied organic matter such as farm manures or crop residues are not normally
used in a citrus grove situation due to lack of availability or prohibitive
cost. The leaf and dead wood litter that is generated is not sufficient to
maintain an organic matter content under the trees which is comparable to that
under grass middles. Efforts to increase citrus grove soil organic matter
content have been made by growing cover crops using species of
Crotalaria or hairy indigo, but success was poor because the crops
could not be sufficiently incorporated into the soil without damaging the tree
root system.
Non-conventional Sources of Organic Matter: Humic substances.
Humate products for agricultural use are produced through mineral sand mining
and recovery operations. The end product contains a majority of organic
material (concentrated humic acid) mixed with smaller amounts of mineral
matter. It can be applied to soil to improve its fertility, especially in the
zone of highest root activity. Humate concentrates provide many of the
advantages of conventional organic matter sources over a long period with less
handling problems, especially in situations where there is no feasible
alternative to purchasing additional supplies of humus. They have been
demonstrated to have favorable effects on tissue nutrient balance, fertilizer
uptake, top and root growth, and crop yield and quality for a large variety of
field, horticultural and ornamental plants. They have been most effective in
soils with less than two percent organic matter.
The plant characteristic
that the addition of humic substances has consistently enhanced more than any
other is root length, especially on sandy soils. A preliminary study with the
citrus trees potted in sand showed that after a period of one year, the root
dry weight was increased when a humic acid material was added at the rate of
one lb. per cubic yard of soil as compared to an untreated treatment. Tree top
growth, vigor, and trunk cross-sectional area also increased in response to
humate addition.
A field study with young citrus trees is currently
underway to determine if the addition of humic acid can increase fruit yield.
In this trial, the trunk cross-sectional area increase of newly-planted trees
was greater for the first year of growth where 0.5-1.0 lb. of humate material
per tree was applied at planting. These data are not conclusive, as much more
research is needed to determine the long-term effects of humic acid addition to
citrus trees, especially as they come into bearing.
REPRINTED FROM THE
CITRUS INDUSTRY - OCTOBER 1989
The authors are Assistant Professor,
(Soil Scientist), Southwest Florida Research and Education Center, Immokalee;
former Research Scientist, and Professor, Fruit Crops Dept., Univ. of Florida
Gainesville, respectively.