Organic Matter
Also called: SOM, soil organic matter
Soil organic matter (SOM) is the fraction of soil composed of decomposed plant and animal residues, living microbes, and humus. It typically makes up 1–6% of mineral-soil volume but drives most soil functions: water retention, nutrient supply, and microbial life. Each 1% increase in SOM stores an additional 150,000–250,000 liters of plant-available water per hectare.
How Organic Matter Works
SOM exists on a continuum: fresh residues (leaves, roots) decompose through microbial action into particulate organic matter, then stable humus that persists for decades or centuries. The humic fraction is what gives healthy topsoil its dark color and holds the majority of its benefits.
SOM performs five agronomic jobs. First, it holds water — each 1% SOM increases plant-available water 10–20%. Second, it supplies 20–40% of crop nitrogen demand biologically as microbes mineralize organic N through the season. Third, it buffers pH and binds nutrients in plant-available form via its large cation-exchange surface. Fourth, it glues soil particles into aggregates, preventing erosion and compaction. Fifth, it feeds the soil microbiome, which in turn suppresses pathogens and cycles nutrients.
Building SOM requires adding carbon faster than microbes decompose it. Practices: cover cropping (0.1–0.3% SOM/year gain), compost (0.1–0.4% per amendment event), reduced tillage (preserves existing SOM), manure, and cash-crop residue retention. Losing SOM is much faster than building it — intensive tillage, bare fallows, and continuous monoculture can drop SOM 0.5–1% in a single decade. Farms in the 3–5% SOM range are typically the most resilient to weather shocks and the most fertilizer-efficient.
Sources
- USDA NRCS (2022). Soil organic matter — soil quality indicator sheet.
- FAO (2021). Soil Organic Carbon: the hidden potential.