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NotesESSTopic 5.1Soil properties
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5.1.21 min read

Soil properties

IB Environmental Systems and Societies • Unit 5

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Soil properties

Big idea: Soil properties determine how well plants grow. Key properties include texture, structure, pH, organic matter content, and water-holding capacity.

Soil texture

Texture refers to the size of mineral particles. The three main types are:

Sandy soil

  • Large particles (0.05-2mm)
  • Good drainage and aeration
  • Low water and nutrient retention
  • Warms up quickly in spring

Clay soil

  • Tiny particles (<0.002mm)
  • Poor drainage, easily waterlogged
  • High water and nutrient retention
  • Slow to warm, hard when dry

Loam is the ideal agricultural soil — a balanced mix of sand, silt, and clay with good drainage AND nutrient retention.


Other key properties

  • Soil pH — affects nutrient availability (most crops prefer pH 6-7)
  • Organic matter / humus — improves structure, holds nutrients and water
  • Porosity — pore spaces for air and water
  • Water-holding capacity — ability to retain moisture for plants
  • Cation exchange capacity (CEC) — ability to hold and release nutrients
PAST PAPER PATTERN: Questions ask you to link soil properties to productivity. Example: "High humus content increases water-holding capacity AND nutrient availability, leading to higher NPP." Always make the cause-effect chain clear!

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A field becomes waterlogged after heavy rain and is sticky when wet and hard when dry. which soil type is most likely and give one reason. [2 marks]

Related ESS Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

5.1.1Soil formation and composition
5.1.3Soil profiles and horizons
5.1.4Soil and productivity
5.1.5Soil degradation
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5.1.1Soil formation and composition
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Soil profiles and horizons5.1.3

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