Biomass Production
Soils are indispensable for plant growth and herewith for the production of biomass, which can be used as food supply for humans and animals but also as raw material or energy source. The optimization of crop yields under strongly varying external conditions (temperature, precipitation frequency and intensity, etc.) is one of the biggest challenges with respect to biomass production. Soil fertility is linked to its non-rigid porous structure allowing for roots to penetrate, to store water while air and oxygen is also available and to retain nutrients to be used by plants and recycled by an enormous diversity of soil biota. Deficiencies in one or more of these conditions might be compensated by agricultural measures – e.g. compaction by tillage, missing nutrients by fertilization – on the long run, however, sustainable biomass production needs to rely on the natural capacity of soil to provide these essential features.