Key Points

System Regulation

  • Reduced erosion protects topsoil and water quality.
  • Groundwater recharge increases with better infiltration.
  • Drought resilience improves through stored water.
  • Flood mitigation supported by slower runoff.

Chemical Processes

  • Organic matter binds water molecules to soil.
  • Nutrient retention improves with better water retention.
  • Humus acts as a sponge for soil moisture.

Physical Processes

  • Improved soil structure increases water infiltration.
  • Higher organic matter boosts water-holding capacity.
  • Reduced compaction prevents runoff and pooling.
  • Enhanced aggregation creates pore space for storage.

Biological Processes

  • Microbial communities create stable soil aggregates.
  • Fungal hyphae bind soil particles, increasing porosity.
  • Earthworm channels improve water infiltration rates.
  • Increased root biomass enhances soil structure.

Know the Debate

  • Soil water infiltration varies significantly by management.
  • Organic matter boosts water retention, drought resilience.
  • Healthy soil structure enhances water availability for plants.
  • Improved water management reduces runoff and improves quality.

Going Deeper

1

Primary Mechanisms: Soil as a Sponge

Healthy soil's ability to manage water is most powerfully understood through its function as a sponge. This involves three interconnected capacities: infiltration (absorbing water), retention (holding water), and regulated release (making water available to plants)....

Healthy soil's ability to manage water is most powerfully understood through its function as a sponge. This involves three interconnected capacities: infiltration (absorbing water), retention (holding water), and regulated release (making water available to plants). Regenerative agricultural practices directly enhance these capacities by fostering a soil environment rich in organic matter and populated by diverse biological communities.

Infiltration: When rain falls on healthy soil, it penetrates readily. This is due to the physical structure created by soil aggregates and the porous networks formed by roots and microbial byproducts. On degraded soils, compaction and lack of aggregation create a surface crust that prevents water from entering the soil. This leads to rapid surface runoff, often within minutes of rainfall commencement, particularly in heavy downpours. For example, soils with less than 1% soil organic matter in the top 15 cm (6 in) might only infiltrate 5-10 mm (0.2-0.4 in) of rain per hour, whereas soils with 4-5% organic matter can infiltrate 25-50 mm (1-2 in) per hour or more, provided their structure is intact.

Retention: Once water infiltrates, healthy soil stores it within its pore spaces. Soil organic matter is a key player here, as its complex chemical structure can hold many times its weight in water. A single unit of fresh organic matter can eventually become humus, which has an exceptional cation exchange capacity and water adsorption capacity. Research suggests that for every 1% increase in soil organic matter, the soil's water-holding capacity in the topsoil can increase by 16,000 to 27,000 gallons per acre (approximately 150,000 to 250,000 liters per hectare), though the exact amount varies significantly with soil texture and depth. This stored water is crucial, acting as a buffer against dry spells.

Regulated Release: The water held in healthy soil is not static; it is physiologically available to plants. The pore size distribution within aggregates, created by biological activity, ensures that water is held at varying tensions. Larger pores drain more freely, providing aeration, while smaller pores retain water accessible to plant roots. This regulation is vital for plant health, preventing both water stress and anaerobic conditions. In contrast, compacted or degraded soils often hold water too tightly, making it unavailable to plants, or drain too quickly without adequate storage.

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  • High organic matter significantly increases soil water retention, preventing issues like the Dust Bowl. Permaculture ponds and swales facilitate slow water permeation deep into the soil, preventing ev

  • Restoring soil's 'sponge effect' through water harvesting is crucial for arid climates. Techniques slow water to enhance infiltration, invigorate plant life, reduce erosion, and increase landscape pro

  • Healthy soil is a living ecosystem requiring organic matter, microbes, and minimal disturbance. Practices like adding compost, leaving roots in the ground, mulching, diverse planting, crop rotation, a

  • Soil Organic Matter (SOM) is vital for soil health and water infiltration. Plant roots, fed by photosynthesis sugars, attract fungi that produce glomalin, aggregating soil particles and creating pores

Research
From the Web
  • Healthy soils with high organic matter are crucial for water infiltration and retention. Soil structure, texture, and porosity influence this capacity, with loam soils being ideal. Practices that dama

2

Supporting Evidence: Microbial Prowess and Organic Matter

The cornerstone of soil's sponge-like qualities lies in the biological activity and the resulting organic matter content. Soil microorganisms, particularly fungi and bacteria, produce sticky substances that bind soil particles together into aggregates. Mycelial networks...

The cornerstone of soil's sponge-like qualities lies in the biological activity and the resulting organic matter content. Soil microorganisms, particularly fungi and bacteria, produce sticky substances that bind soil particles together into aggregates. Mycelial networks of fungi act like a reinforcing mesh, holding these aggregates together and creating stable pores. Earthworms further enhance this by creating burrows that act as conduits for water and air, improving infiltration and aeration significantly.

Studies have quantified the impact of these biological agents. For instance, areas with diverse fungal communities and active earthworm populations can exhibit water infiltration rates that are 10 to 100 times higher than comparable soils lacking these biological components. A shift toward practices that support soil life, such as minimal tillage, cover cropping with diverse species, and diverse organic inputs (e.g., compost, manure), can lead to a measurable increase in microbial biomass and activity within 1-3 years. This biological awakening directly translates to better soil structure and water management.

The role of soil organic matter (SOM) is equally critical and scientifically well-documented. SOM acts as a glue, aggregating soil particles, and as a reservoir, absorbing and holding water. Research from Wageningen University & Research in the Netherlands has shown that increasing soil organic matter from 2% to 4% can double the water holding capacity in the top 30 cm (12 in) of many soil types. This translates to a farmer in Northern Europe (e.g., the Netherlands or Denmark) potentially increasing their soil's plant-available water by 30-60 mm (approx. 1.2-2.4 in), a significant advantage during dry summers.

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Videos & Podcasts
Community
  • Soil Organic Matter (SOM) is vital for soil health and water infiltration. Plant roots, fed by photosynthesis sugars, attract fungi that produce glomalin, aggregating soil particles and creating pores

  • Soil organic matter is key to water retention and soil function; living plants feed soil microbes, while tilling harms soil structure and erosion. Nutrient deficiencies are often due to lack of soil l

  • Carbon and soil organic matter are key to soil health, controlling 90% of functions and doubling water holding capacity from 1-3% organic matter. Soil microbes thrive on living plant roots, dead roots

  • Healthy soil is a living ecosystem requiring organic matter, microbes, and minimal disturbance. Practices like adding compost, leaving roots in the ground, mulching, diverse planting, crop rotation, a

Research
From the Web
  • Soil organic matter significantly increases water-holding capacity, with every 1% SOM storing an extra 10,800 liters/acre. It improves soil structure, enhances cation exchange capacity (CEC) for nutri

  • Soil organic matter is vital for soil health, enhancing plant nutrition through mineralization and CEC, improving soil tilth, water availability, pH buffering, root development, and protecting against

  • Healthy soils with high organic matter are crucial for water infiltration and retention. Soil structure, texture, and porosity influence this capacity, with loam soils being ideal. Practices that dama

  • Organic agriculture increases soil organic matter (SOM), which enhances beneficial soil microbes, nutrient cycling, and plant disease control. Higher SOM improves soil structure, reduces erosion, and

3

Conditions for Success: Climate and Soil Type Influence

The effectiveness of regenerative practices in building soil's water management capacity is influenced by climate and inherent soil properties. However, the fundamental principles of building organic matter and soil structure apply universally. In temperate climates and...

The effectiveness of regenerative practices in building soil's water management capacity is influenced by climate and inherent soil properties. However, the fundamental principles of building organic matter and soil structure apply universally.

In temperate climates and regions with reliable rainfall, such as the agricultural heartlands of North America and Europe, mild winters and moderate summers allow for steady biological activity and decomposition, facilitating the conversion of organic inputs into stable SOM. Practices like cover cropping are particularly effective in building soil organic matter and structure, leading to a 0.2-0.5% annual increase in SOM over 5-10 years with consistent application, which significantly enhances water infiltration and retention, reducing runoff from intense spring and summer storms.

In semi-arid and arid regions, such as parts of Australia, the Middle East, or the Southwestern United States, water is the primary limiting factor. Here, the sponge analogy becomes even more critical. Practices that maximize water capture and minimize evaporation are paramount. Using mulches, contour farming, swales, and water-harvesting structures, alongside cover crops adapted to dry conditions (e.g., native grasses, drought-tolerant legumes), can significantly improve soil moisture. In Western Australia, farmers have reported that increasing soil organic carbon from 1% to 2.5% through improved grazing management and reduced tillage has increased plant-available water by up to 50 mm (2 in), extending pasture viability during dry periods.

Tropical regions, while often receiving high rainfall, can also suffer from extreme wet and dry seasons, and soils can be prone to rapid degradation due to high temperatures and intense precipitation. In these areas, practices like agroforestry, cover cropping with nitrogen-fixing species, and no-till farming are vital for maintaining soil structure and preventing erosion. The humid tropics of Brazil, for instance, benefit immensely from well-structured soils that can absorb heavy monsoonal rains, reducing landslide risks and preventing nutrient leaching that would otherwise occur on degraded, impermeable soils. Restoring this capacity, often over 3-7 years, is key to sustainable production.

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Community
  • Tropical soils have low cation exchange capacity due to minimal clay and humic acid; organic matter is primarily in canopy, not soil. Soil fauna create porosity, so lack of organic matter causes erosi

  • High organic matter significantly increases soil water retention, preventing issues like the Dust Bowl. Permaculture ponds and swales facilitate slow water permeation deep into the soil, preventing ev

  • Build healthy soil for carbon sequestration by protecting it with cover, mulch, or roots; reducing tilling; using compost; and avoiding pesticides and leaf blowers. Practices are key for plant growth

  • Conserve soil moisture by minimizing disturbance and tilling, as reduced-disturbance methods with cover crops retain more water. Encourage biodiversity above and below ground through diverse plantings

Research
4

Interaction Effects: Beyond Water Retention

The enhanced water dynamics in healthy soil have cascading positive effects on other soil functions and farm productivity. This interconnectedness is a hallmark of regenerative agriculture. Nutrient Cycling: Healthy soil structure and increased organic matter improve the...

The enhanced water dynamics in healthy soil have cascading positive effects on other soil functions and farm productivity. This interconnectedness is a hallmark of regenerative agriculture.

Nutrient Cycling: Healthy soil structure and increased organic matter improve the soil's ability to hold and supply nutrients. Water acts as a carrier for dissolved nutrients in the soil solution. When soil retains water better, it also retains essential plant nutrients like nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, preventing their loss through leaching or runoff. As soil organic matter decomposes, it releases these nutrients in a slow, steady manner, making them available to plants over time. This reduces the need for synthetic nutrient inputs, with farmers often observing a reduction in synthetic fertilizer applications by 20-40% after 3-5 years of building soil health.

Soil Aeration and Root Health: The improved pore structure created by aggregation and biological activity allows for better air exchange within the soil. This is critical because plant roots require oxygen to respire and function properly. Soils that are compacted or waterlogged become anaerobic, suffocating roots and hindering nutrient uptake. The spongy nature of healthy soil ensures adequate aeration even during periods of high soil moisture, promoting deeper and more vigorous root growth. This leads to healthier, more resilient crops that are better equipped to withstand stress.

Disease and Pest Suppression: A diverse and active soil microbiome, fostered by healthy soil conditions and abundant organic matter, plays a crucial role in suppressing soil-borne diseases and pests. Beneficial microorganisms can outcompete pathogens, form symbiotic relationships with plants that enhance defense mechanisms, or produce compounds that deter pests. The improved water management of healthy soils also contributes by reducing plant stress, as stressed plants are often more susceptible to diseases and pest attacks. Farmers integrating livestock and diverse cover crops frequently report a decrease in pest pressure over 5-7 years.

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Videos & Podcasts
Community
  • Create healthy soil for drought resilience by adding compost/humus (30% by volume) twice yearly. Healthy soil improves water retention, drainage, and plant health, reducing the need for inputs. Avoid

  • Promotes soil health by reducing tillage, increasing diversity, maintaining living roots with cover crops and rotations, and integrating livestock. These practices improve soil structure, organic matt

    Read more (opens in new window) smallfarms.cornell.edu
  • Healthy soil is a living ecosystem benefiting farms and the environment through nutrient cycling, pollution filtering, and drought resilience. Cover crops improve soil health, reduce erosion, and boos

    Read more (opens in new window) sustainableagriculture.net
  • Develop a diverse fungal network and bacterial population using compost teas to improve soil water-holding capacity and draught-proofing. Healthy soil protects plants from disease and pests, enabling

Research
From the Web
  • Healthy soils, with balanced biological, physical, and chemical properties, support crop health by cycling nutrients, improving soil structure for water and aeration, and maintaining optimal nutrient

  • Healthy soils, with balanced biological, physical, and chemical properties, support crop health by enhancing nutrient cycling, improving water management, and promoting beneficial organisms. Organic m

  • Healthy soil, achieved through regenerative practices, significantly increases water retention, drought resilience, and farm profitability by acting like a sponge and reducing runoff.

5

Measuring the Effect: Practical Indicators for Farmers

Farmers can observe tangible changes that indicate improved soil-water connections. These are often qualitative but can be complemented by simple quantitative measures. Observable Infiltration: The most direct indicator is how quickly water enters the soil. During...

Farmers can observe tangible changes that indicate improved soil-water connections. These are often qualitative but can be complemented by simple quantitative measures.

Observable Infiltration: The most direct indicator is how quickly water enters the soil. During rainfall or irrigation, observe if water ponds on the surface and runs off, or if it quickly disappears into the soil. After a rain event, check for standing water days later in degraded areas versus healthy ones. Infiltration rates can be roughly assessed by digging a small hole (e.g., 30 cm x 30 cm x 30 cm or 12 in x 12 in x 12 in), filling it with water, letting it drain, and refilling it to measure how long it takes for the water level to drop a set amount (e.g., 2.5 cm or 1 in). A drop rate of, say, 1-2 cm (0.4-0.8 in) per hour is indicative of good infiltration.

Soil Moisture Retention: Feel the soil at different depths after rainfall. Healthy soil will remain moist but not waterlogged for longer periods, often exhibiting a crumbly, friable texture. Degraded soils may become hard and dry quickly on the surface, or remain saturated and muddy for extended durations. Simple soil moisture probes can provide quantitative data, showing higher sustained moisture levels in soils with better health. Many farmers in the Canadian Prairies, for example, have noted their soils hold moisture for an extra 7-10 days after an irrigation or rain event following 5 years of implementing reduced tillage and cover crops.

Earthworm Activity and Aggregate Stability: The presence of earthworms is a strong indicator of soil biological health and, by extension, good soil structure. More earthworms mean more natural drainage channels. To assess aggregate stability, take a soil sample from the field and gently immerse it in a bucket of water. Healthy aggregates will maintain their structure for several minutes, slowly releasing some sediment. Degraded aggregates will immediately break apart and disperse, creating cloudy water. This simple visual test can demonstrate the structural improvements achieved through increased organic matter and reduced disturbance.

Sources behind this view

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Videos & Podcasts
Research
From the Web
  • Provides a practical guide to measuring soil health using field indicators and lab tests, emphasizing consistency, context-specific interpretation, and tracking functional improvements over time. Link

  • Seven key soil health indicators are detailed: soil cover (bare soil is bad), color (darker is better, indicates organic matter), structure (aggregation for pore space), biological activity (earthworm

  • Assessing soil health involves general field observations (yields, root health, erosion) and detailed field indicators like soil cover, aggregate stability, and earthworm presence. Soil health is best

  • Assess soil health visually and by smell using indicators like soil cover, color, structure, biological activity (earthworms, dung beetles), rooting resistance, earthy smell (geosmin), and erosion sig

6

Regional Variation: From Arid to Humid

The expression of the soil-water connection, and the challenges it presents, varies significantly across global agricultural landscapes. Semi-Arid North America (e.g., Great Plains, USA/Canada): Here, water conservation is paramount. Farmers have adopted practices like...

The expression of the soil-water connection, and the challenges it presents, varies significantly across global agricultural landscapes.

Semi-Arid North America (e.g., Great Plains, USA/Canada): Here, water conservation is paramount. Farmers have adopted practices like no-till farming for over two decades, often alongside diverse cover crop mixes (e.g., annual ryegrass, forage sorghum, legumes) and rotational grazing. These have led to measurable increases in soil organic matter, with some ranches reporting boosts from 1.5% to 3.0% over 10-15 years. This translates to an additional 75-125 mm (3-5 in) of water storage capacity, critical for surviving infrequent but intense summer rains and prolonging pasture health through dry spells.

Europe (e.g., Spain, France): In regions with variable rainfall, such as southern Spain, healthy soil structure is vital for mitigating erosion during intense storms and retaining moisture during prolonged dry periods. Farmers here are increasingly using cover crops (e.g., vicia, oats, mustard) and compost to improve soil aggregation and organic matter. Evidence suggests that a 1% increase in SOM can improve plant-available water by up to 80 mm (3 in) within the top 30 cm (12 in). This helps vineyards and olive groves thrive with reduced irrigation, which is becoming increasingly important due to climate change.

Africa (e.g., Eastern African Highlands): For smallholders in regions like Kenya or Ethiopia, improving soil's water absorption and retention directly impacts food security. Practices like intercropping cereals with legumes, conservation tillage, and the use of animal manure have helped farmers increase soil organic matter by 0.3-0.6% annually in some cases. This improves the ability of their land to soak up the seasonal rains, reducing runoff and ensuring moisture availability for crops during the crucial growth stages, often increasing yields by 15-30% within 3-5 years.

Asia (e.g., India): In rice paddy systems and rain-fed agriculture, soil structure is key. Building soil organic matter through crop residue incorporation, green manures, and integrated livestock systems improves water infiltration in rice paddies, reducing water seepage losses. In rain-fed areas, increased SOM enhances water retention, making crops more resilient to drought. Farmers in Maharashtra, India, have reported that adopting practices to build soil organic carbon from below 0.5% to over 1.0% has significantly extended the moisture availability for crops like pulses and millets, reducing yield variability year-on-year.

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Community
  • In arid deserts, increasing soil organic matter (aiming for 1.5% over 40 years) and using cover crops/living mulch are key to retaining limited rainfall (8-10 inches annually) and reducing evaporation

Research
7

Research Gaps: Quantifying Long-Term Hydrological Shifts

While the general principles are well-established, there remain areas for further research to refine our understanding of the quantitative, long-term impacts of regenerative practices on farm-scale hydrology and watershed health. Predictive Modeling: More precise models...

While the general principles are well-established, there remain areas for further research to refine our understanding of the quantitative, long-term impacts of regenerative practices on farm-scale hydrology and watershed health.

Predictive Modeling: More precise models are needed to predict how different regenerative practices will affect specific hydrological processes (infiltration, evaporation, runoff, groundwater recharge) under varying climate scenarios and soil types across diverse global regions. This would allow for more tailored management recommendations.

Downstream Impacts: Quantifying the long-term, cumulative impact of widespread adoption of regenerative agriculture on regional water quality and quantity, including groundwater levels and river flow regimes, requires extensive, multi-year monitoring across various catchments.

Interaction with Climate Extremes: While we see benefits, further research is needed to fully understand how regenerative soils perform during prolonged, record-breaking droughts or extreme flood events, and what thresholds of soil health are required for optimal resilience.

Economic Valuation: While cost savings are observable, a more comprehensive economic valuation of the ecosystem services provided by healthy soils related to water management (e.g., flood mitigation, water purification, irrigation savings) is crucial for incentivizing widespread adoption.

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Research
8

Connecting Science to Practice: Management Decisions

The scientific understanding of the soil-water connection directly informs practical on-farm management decisions. Tillage Choices: Reducing or eliminating tillage preserves soil aggregation and pore structure, directly enhancing infiltration and water retention....

The scientific understanding of the soil-water connection directly informs practical on-farm management decisions.

Tillage Choices: Reducing or eliminating tillage preserves soil aggregation and pore structure, directly enhancing infiltration and water retention. Practices like no-till, strip-till, and minimum tillage are fundamental for building this sponge-like soil.

Organic Matter Diversification: Continuously feeding the soil with diverse organic materials—cover crops, crop residues, compost, animal manures, and mulches—is essential for building soil organic matter. This directly increases water-holding capacity and improves soil structure.

Water-Smart Landscaping: In sloping landscapes, techniques like swales, contour farming, and terracing are used to slow down water flow, allowing more time for infiltration and reducing erosion, ensuring water is captured and retained on-site.

Livestock Integration: Managed rotational grazing can stimulate grass growth, increasing root exudates that feed soil microbes and build soil organic matter. The hoof action, when managed correctly, can break up surface crusts and improve infiltration, especially on grassland systems.

Cover Crop Selection: Choosing cover crops based on regional climate and soil type is crucial. Legumes fix nitrogen, grasses improve soil structure and build biomass, and brassicas can help break through compacted layers. A diverse mix generally offers the most comprehensive benefits for soil health and water management.

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Videos & Podcasts
Community
  • Enhance soil health through plant diversity, continuous soil cover (living plants/residues), and livestock integration. Manage carbon-to-nitrogen ratios of residues and adopt no-till practices to impr

  • Sustainable soil management practices like reducing tillage, planting cover crops, and improving crop rotations enhance soil health and drought resilience. No-till systems drastically reduce water run

    Read more (opens in new window) sustainableagriculture.net
  • Conserve soil moisture by minimizing disturbance and tilling, as reduced-disturbance methods with cover crops retain more water. Encourage biodiversity above and below ground through diverse plantings

  • Explains the benefits of no-till/strip-till, cover crops, and nutrient management for reducing soil erosion, improving soil health, increasing water infiltration, and mitigating nutrient loss and gree

    Read more (opens in new window) sustainableagriculture.net
Research
From the Web
9

Know the Debate

Healthy soil's ability to act like a sponge—absorbing, retaining, and releasing water—is a cornerstone of regenerative agriculture, but its express...

Healthy soil's ability to act like a sponge—absorbing, retaining, and releasing water—is a cornerstone of regenerative agriculture, but its expression varies significantly across landscapes. In humid temperate regions with reliable rainfall, adopting practices like cover cropping and reduced tillage can lead to noticeable improvements in water infiltration and retention within 2-3 years, significantly reducing runoff. Conversely, in semi-arid rangelands where water is scarce, the benefits of increased soil organic matter on water-holding capacity are even more pronounced, though achieving substantial gains may take 5-7 years due to slower decomposition rates. Entry costs for these soil-building practices vary widely, from minimal labor and seed costs for cover crops on small farms to significant capital investment in equipment and permanent infrastructure for larger operations or more intensive grazing systems.

How fast does soil water infiltration improve?

Rapid improvement (1-3 years)

In fertile, humid regions with active biology, regenerative practices like cover cropping and minimal tillage can rapidly improve infiltration rates. This is due to quick microbial colonization and aggregate formation, making soil absorbent within 1-3 years.

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Videos & Podcasts
Research
  • The role of soil hydrology in soil health (opens in new window)

    This study found: This chapter explains how the way soil holds and moves water (soil hydrology) is key to soil health. It highlights that how water interacts with soil affects soil structure, nutrient availability, and the life within the soil, all of which are crucial for healthy plants and a healthy environment. The chapter explores how different water-related soil conditions influence crop growth and the benefits soil provides, like filtering water. It emphasizes that understanding and managing soil water is essential for good soil health and effective farming practices.

Moderate improvement (3-7 years)

In many temperate climates, achieving significant and stable improvements in water infiltration takes 3-7 years as soil organic matter gradually increases and biological communities establish, requiring consistent management.

Sources behind this view

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Videos & Podcasts
Research
  • How does soil structure affect water infiltration? A meta-data systematic review (opens in new window)

    This study found: This review of over 150 studies confirms that how soil is structured (its arrangement and aggregation) greatly affects how well water soaks into the ground. Farming practices like adding soil conditioners, how crops are managed, and tillage all change soil structure, which in turn impacts water infiltration. The research found strong links between soil structure and how fast water can move through the soil, both when it's dry and when it's saturated. The review suggests we need more research to better understand these connections theoretically.

From the Web
  • Healthy soil with organic matter and mycorrhizal fungi is key to water retention and mitigating climate change. Holistic land management with properly timed grazing can restore degraded land to fertile grassland, promoting soil fertility and biodiversity.

Slow or context-dependent improvement (5-10+ years)

In semi-arid areas with limited rainfall and slower biological decomposition, or on highly degraded soils, it can take 5-10 years or more for noticeable improvements in water infiltration and retention to manifest.

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Videos & Podcasts
From the Web
  • Improving soil health involves six principles: know context, cover soil, minimize disturbance, increase plant diversity, maintain living roots, and integrate livestock, guided by ecological principles.

  • Soil for Water project helps farmers and ranchers increase soil water retention using regenerative practices, appropriate technology, and peer learning to build drought resilience.

Making Sense of the Differences

The speed of soil water infiltration improvement varies primarily with climate, soil type, and the intensity of regenerative management. Humid regions with active biology see faster changes (1-3 years). Temperate climates typically experience moderate improvements (3-7 years) as organic matter builds. Semi-arid regions or severely degraded soils require longer timelines (5-10+ years) due to slower biological processes and water limitations. Farmers should assess their local climate, soil organic matter levels, and management consistency to set realistic expectations for infiltration rates.

How much water can healthy soil hold?

Significant increase with organic matter (e.g., +50-100mm)

Increasing soil organic matter by 1-2% can substantially boost plant-available water, often adding 50-100 mm (2-4 inches) of storage in the topsoil, significantly enhancing drought resilience.

Sources behind this view

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Videos & Podcasts
From the Web
  • Healthy soils with high organic matter are crucial for water infiltration and retention. Soil structure, texture, and porosity influence this capacity, with loam soils being ideal. Practices that damage soil aggregation reduce water absorption, while increasing organic matter significantly boosts water holding capacity.

Moderate but valuable increase with management

Improvements in water retention are notable, with each 1% soil organic matter increase potentially adding 25,000-50,000 liters/hectare, providing crucial buffering against dry spells.

Sources behind this view

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Research
  • How does building healthy soils impact sustainable use of water resources in irrigated agriculture? (opens in new window)

    This study found: As water becomes scarcer, farms that rely on irrigation face challenges in reducing their water use while still growing enough crops. This review explores how improving soil health can help. Healthy soils can capture more rainwater (green water) and store it, making it available for plants. They can also help plants use water more efficiently, reducing the need for irrigation (blue water). By improving soil health, farms can become more resilient to droughts and reduce their overall water footprint. To fully understand this potential, more research is needed that looks at how soil health, irrigation, and crop choices work together. While the technical benefits are clear, adopting these practices also requires overcoming practical and organizational hurdles.

  • How does soil structure affect water infiltration? A meta-data systematic review (opens in new window)

    This study found: This review of over 150 studies confirms that how soil is structured (its arrangement and aggregation) greatly affects how well water soaks into the ground. Farming practices like adding soil conditioners, how crops are managed, and tillage all change soil structure, which in turn impacts water infiltration. The research found strong links between soil structure and how fast water can move through the soil, both when it's dry and when it's saturated. The review suggests we need more research to better understand these connections theoretically.

From the Web
  • Healthy soil, achieved through regenerative practices, significantly increases water retention, drought resilience, and farm profitability by acting like a sponge and reducing runoff.

Making Sense of the Differences

The water-holding capacity of soil scales with its organic matter content. While precise figures vary by soil type and climate, each 1% increase in soil organic matter can add 25,000-50,000 liters per hectare (25,000-50,000 gallons per acre) of plant-available water. Field reports and academic studies consistently show this effect, with some estimates suggesting up to 100 mm (4 inches) extra storage in topsoil. Farmers can significantly improve their drought resilience and reduce irrigation needs by focusing on maximizing soil organic matter through cover cropping and reduced tillage.