Soil's Champion, Elaine Ingham, Passes at 73

Dr. Elaine Ingham, known for her soil food web work, died on February 16, 2026, aged 73. Her legacy impacts farming and ecosystems.

#ElaineIngham, #SoilHealth, #SoilFoodWeb, #RegenerativeAgriculture, #Obituary

https://newsletter.tf/elaine-ingham-soil-expert-dies-feb-16-73/

Dr. Elaine Ingham, a key soil scientist, passed away on February 16, 2026. Her work on the soil food web changed how we understand soil health.

#ElaineIngham, #SoilHealth, #SoilFoodWeb, #RegenerativeAgriculture, #Obituary
https://newsletter.tf/elaine-ingham-soil-expert-dies-feb-16-73/

Soil Expert Elaine Ingham Dies at 73 on Feb 16

Dr. Elaine Ingham, known for her soil food web work, died on February 16, 2026, aged 73. Her legacy impacts farming and ecosystems.

NewsletterTF
Simple vineyard growing practice impacts soil microbiome deep below surface

UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — Pennsylvania is the fourth largest wine producer in the United States, according to the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture . The industry supports nearly 11,000 jobs and directly contributes $1.77 billion to the state economy annually. In an effort to produce more and better grapes at a lower cost and with less environmental impact, vineyard growers have increasingly planted grass between rows of vines. These "groundcovers" root shallowly, but can benefit vineyard soils and reduce the need for herbicide applications. Now, a team of plant scientists in Penn State’s College of Agricultural Sciences has found that implementing this practice impacts far more than previously thought. It not only alters the biology and ecology at the surface, where the grasses are planted, but also alters the system far below the surface, the researchers reported in a new study published in Phytobiomes Journal . The team compared how vineyards with and without groundcover in the vine row impacted the soil microbiome — the community of bacteria and fungi associated with soil — across a soil profile about three feet deep over two growing seasons. They concluded that grass groundcover changed the soil microbiome far beyond the depth of its own root system. “The grass roots are primarily growing within the top six to 12 inches of soil, and the grape roots are going from the soil surface to a meter-plus deep,” said Hayden Bock, assistant professor of landscape sustainability in the Department of Plant Science and co-lead author of the paper. “What is interesting is that at deeper soil depths, up to a meter deep, the community of microorganisms that were there responded to the grass roots growing far above them. What we do at one point of the soil can cascade to other deeper parts of the soil.” Bock explained that vineyard growers have traditionally grown grasses between their rows — up to about two to three feet from the planted vine row — as a way of suppressing weeds and providing a travel path for harvest and maintenance equipment. The vine row has traditionally been left vegetation-free with herbicide to minimize competition between groundcovers and grapevines. But previous research site has shown that grapevines can successfully co-exist with groundcovers planted across the entire vineyard floor by deepening their root system. The deeper grapevine roots avoid the shallower grass roots and access deeper soils that usually have more available water and consistent supply of nutrients. It’s also thought that deeper rooted grapevines may be more resistant to weather extremes, Bock said. However, Bock said little is known about how the soil changes when groundcover is introduced, and how those changes might influence the vines. This project took place in the research vineyard at Penn State’s Russell E. Larson Agricultural Research Center at Rock Springs. The research vineyard and this experiment were initiated by co-author Michela Centinari, associate professor of viticulture. Bock began to examine the soils in this vineyard as an undergraduate student, working with co-lead author Suzanne Fleishman, who graduated with a doctorate in ecology from Penn State in 2022 and is now an assistant professor of root biology. The team planted the first vines and groundcovers in 2016, giving them time to become established before sampling the soil at different depths during peak growth seasons in the summer of 2019 and again in the summer of 2020. While bacterial and fungal diversity varied year-to-year, overall, the researchers found that vines with groundcover had a unique microbiome signature with the abundance of bacteria and fungi species shifting across the soil profile under groundcovers. Based on the life history of these microbes, Bock said that there is reason to suspect that these microbial changes could also change the health and functioning of vineyard soils. More research is needed to understand how this shift translates to vine health, Bock cautioned, but he explained that this first step in understanding a change exists could eventually help vineyard growers more strategically care for their crops. “In this study, we show the effects of groundcover extend below the surface rooting zone and may have widespread implications for below-ground ecological trajectories,” he said. “Because vineyard soil microbes influence vine health, performance and can operate as a reservoir of microbes for above-ground tissues — the stems, leaves and grapes — adopting under-vine groundcovers may provide a biology-driven means for combining production goals with soil-health stewardship.” Bock said growers may spend extra effort getting groundcovers established in their vineyards, but the long-term payoff comes in less erosion, less weed management and improved nutrient management. Beyond vineyards, he said the same benefits of groundcovers could potentially be seen in other horticultural crops grown in Pennsylvania. “The novelty of this research is that we don’t often think about deep soil health, as far as the community of microorganisms and nutrients that are there, but many horticultural crops, especially grapes and apples, have very deep roots,” he said. “So, thinking about deep soils are crucial to the long-term sustainability and management of these systems.” In addition to Bock, Centinari and Fleishman, co-authors include Terrence Bell, assistant professor of soil microbiology and ecology; David Eissenstat, professor of woody plant physiology; and William King, previously a researcher with Penn State who is now a lecturer in plant-microbe interactions at the University of Southampton in the U.K. This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

Penn State News

Mars, Incorporated and Olam Food Ingredients (ofi) have announced a new, five-year strategic collaboration aimed at accelerating climate-smart and #regenerativeagriculture practices in cocoa production in Ecuador. 🍫

https://sustainabilityonline.net/news/mars-ofi-announce-collaboration-on-accelerating-net-zero-cocoa/

Mars, ofi announce collaboration on accelerating net zero cocoa - Sustainability Online

Mars and ofi have announced a new, five-year strategic collaboration aimed at accelerating climate-smart agriculture practices in cocoa production in Ecuador.

Sustainability Online - A business news platform with a sustainable focus. Featuring the latest sustainability news and ESG insight, viewed through a business lens.
@rocky_the_anarchist #Earth4All is a good read. And yeah, we cover a lot of topics on #SolarPunkSunday, including #Sustainability, #RegenerativeAgriculture, #Degrowth, #SeedSwaps, #BuildingCommunity, etc.

There's a irony in academia spending decades and sophisticated fiber optic technology to confirm what regenerative farmers have known through practice for generations.

Harper Adams 20-year field study concludes no-till preserves soil structure, reduces agrochemical dependence, and retains carbon. Farmers practicing regenerative agriculture didn't need a paper for that.

Tim Connolly puts it well: science deserves a participation trophy at least

https://open.substack.com/pub/memypigsandi/p/agstacker-community-newsletter-a05?utm_campaign=post-expanded-share&utm_medium=post%20viewer

#RegenerativeAgriculture

AgStacker Community Newsletter

April Edition

Me, My Pigs and I.

Towards a sustainable palm oil supply chain: major Japanese buyers Mitsui & Co and Nissin Foods will be evaluating the regenerative agriculture methods advocated by Malaysian NGO Wild Asia.
Background: https://theedgemalaysia.com/node/789500
New (in Japanese): https://www.nissin.com/jp/company/news/13717/

#PalmOil #RegenerativeAgriculture #WildAsia #Malaysia

Agriculture: Pushing oil palm smallholders to adopt regenerative agriculture

Independent smallholders (ISHs) are already adhering to numerous sustainability standards in the oil palm industry. However, to increase ISH inclusion in the global oil palm supply chain, they need to go beyond certification and look at regenerative agriculture as a means to improve farm profitability, protect biodiversity and increase the potential for more carbon to be sequestered, says Reza Azmi, founder and executive director of Wild Asia.

The Edge Malaysia
just heard about treerangefarms.com , trees and free chickens, what could be better? (makes sense too - some protection from hawks then roost inside at night - and free fertilizer...) #regenerativeagriculture

Tree-Range Farmers – Delicious...
Tree-Range Farmers – Delicious Chicken Raised Regeneratively

From ‘sustainable’ to ‘regenerative’ agriculture: What’s in a name? | The-14

Regenerative agriculture goes beyond sustainability, emphasizing ethics, ecosystems, and values while warning against corporate co-option and empty marketing

The-14 Pictures
A huge applause to all our #followers and #supporters 👏🏻 who have walked with us from the beginning of our #Gofundme until yesterday when we crossed the finish line🎉 We are very very happy for #Mastodon family, you made our dream real This is huge for us as youths We promise transparency and to use everything well. Now we own #land and we feel inspired and motivated Thank you for believing in us #FundraiserSuccess #ChangeMakers #landforsustainability #ECOYOUTHSNETWORK #Regenerativeagriculture