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Soil Microbes

Quick definition

Bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and other microorganisms living in soil that decompose organic matter, cycle nutrients, support plant health, and suppress pathogens.

In plain terms

Trillions of microbes live in healthy soil. Bacteria decompose organic matter and fix nitrogen. Fungi form relationships with plant roots (mycorrhizae), expanding root surface and nutrient uptake. Protozoa feed on bacteria, releasing nutrients plants can use. Healthy soils have diverse microbial communities; poor soils have few microbes. Compost, organic matter, and avoiding pesticides support soil microbes.

Why this matters

Soil microbes are the foundation of plant health. Supporting them (through compost, minimal disturbance, avoiding chemicals) multiplies their benefits.

In practice

Examples

  • Rich soil with high organic matter: diverse microbe community; disease-suppressive soil; plants thrive.
  • Compacted clay with no organic matter: few microbes; poor soil function; amend with compost.
  • Fungicide-treated soil: microbe populations crash; reduced nutrient cycling, disease suppression weakens.
  • Healthy garden soil: teeming with bacteria and fungi; visible fungal networks; dark, alive-looking.

Practical applications

  • Add compost annually; feeds microbes and supports diversity.
  • Minimize disturbance (avoid excessive tilling); protects microbial networks.
  • Avoid broad-spectrum pesticides; kill many beneficial microbes.
  • Mulch supports microbial activity; protective layer and steady food source.
  • Avoid synthetic fertilizers when possible; compost feeds microbes better.

Connected terms