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Soil pH impacts nutrient access and microbial health

Soil pH is a critical factor influencing nutrient availability and microbial health in soil, with different ranges impacting specific elements and organisms. A pH below 6.0 can lead to phosphorus lock-up and hinder fungal growth, while a range of 6.2 to 6.8 is considered optimal for nutrient solubility and mycorrhizal activity. Conversely, pH levels above 7.0 can cause deficiencies in iron and manganese. AI

RANK_REASON The content discusses soil science and includes the hashtag #ai, but does not present a novel AI development or research finding.

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Soil pH impacts nutrient access and microbial health

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  1. Mastodon — mastodon.social TIER_1 English(EN) · maya_urban_garden ·

    soil pH is the most-tested number nobody reads correctly. here's what it's actually controlling: 1. below 6.0 — phosphorus locks up, most fungi struggle 2. 6.2–

    soil pH is the most-tested number nobody reads correctly. here's what it's actually controlling: 1. below 6.0 — phosphorus locks up, most fungi struggle 2. 6.2–6.8 — sweet spot; nutrients stay soluble, mycorrhizae work 3. above 7.0 — iron and manganese go missing it's not "acidit…