Soil nutrients: Are you a poor rich? - Dr Aurelie Quade

“If your inputs are no longer giving you the return you hoped for, it may not be a product problem — it could be a soil problem. Understanding where your nutrients actually sit is the first step to getting more from every dollar you spend.”

Nutrient pools: long, medium and short-term Soil nutrient status is not just about deficiencies, sufficiencies or toxicities. It comes from three pools, each serving a productivity role over different time frames:
• Total nutrients — long-term wealth
• Exchangeable nutrients — medium-term savings
• Soluble nutrients — short-term cash in hand

Total nutrients are everything present in the soil profile — both accessible and inaccessible.
Think of this pool as your total wealth: your disposable cash plus the assets tied up in your house, car, or farm. Some nutrients are immediately spendable, but much is locked away in minerals or organic matter that need years to mineralise. This pool shows how “wealthy” your soil really is.

Exchangeable nutrients are your savings account. They are not on the credit card yet, but they can be easily drawn down when needed — a few clicks away on your banking app. These nutrients are loosely held on clay surfaces and can quickly top up soluble nutrients. Sandy soils are like poor households with no savings. Clay soils may hold large reserves, but sometimes they cling so tightly that the “savings” behave more like locked-up assets.

Soluble nutrients are your cash in hand — the tap-and-go money. Dissolved in soil water, they are immediately available for plant uptake. Why check your soil assets, savings and cash flow? In a healthy soil, nutrients move smoothly between pools. A sandy soil will never be as “rich” as a heavy clay, but it can still perform at its best — if you know how its finances flow. Regular soil testing shows you whether fertiliser inputs are being deposited into savings, tied up in assets, or leaking away.

Other test parameters add important context:
• pH influences nutrient availabilit
• ECEC (Effective Cation Exchange Capacity) indicates how well your soil can hold and trade nutrients.
• Base ratios (Ca:Mg:K) highlight nutrient balance.
• Buffering capacity and soil organic carbon reveal resilience

When soils degrade, two things happen: nutrients get locked away in assets you cannot liquidate, or your bank account gets “hacked” — every fertiliser deposit vanishes. In practice, that means you might apply $1 worth of nutrients and only $0.40 to $0.60 reaches your crop.

The “Poor Rich” Farmer
If your total nutrient pool is high but your exchangeable pool is consistently low, you are a poor rich. On paper you are wealthy, but in practice you are broke. You still need to apply nutrients as if your soil had none, just to keep the soluble pool afloat. Over time this gap worsens. Poor-rich soils also struggle with moisture retention. And yield potential still comes down to the most

How to become a “Savvy Rich”
Ultimately,what matters most is not which pool nutrients sit in, but how well your soil biology transfers them between pools. That is the role of microbes.
Soil organic carbon is the best indicator of microbial activity. As SOC increases, so do the number and diversity of microbes capable of moving nutrients from locked-up assets into the savings and cash pools. A 1% increase in SOC lifts your soil water holding capacity by around 150,000 litres per hectare — about 150 ute loads. At 2%, that is 300,000 litres: the effect is exponential. Fungi are powerful brokers.
At the tips of their hyphae, they can create micro-zones of very low pH, dissolving otherwise unavailable minerals. In financial terms, they are the negotiators who can turn your ute sitting in the shed into instant cash — without wrecking the farm’s balance sheet.

Take-home messages
1. Soil test regularly to track where your nutrients sit.
2. Use all three pools — assets, savings and cash — for both immediate productivity and long-term resilience. 3. Build soil carbon and microbial activity to improve nutrient cycling, water holding and soil health


Latest News



State and Territory Landcare Awards 2026

The 2026 State and Territory Landcare Awards stand as a prestigious biennial national Landcare Awards program. The Landcare Awards honour individuals, groups and organisations that are making outstanding contributions to sustainable agriculture and environmental conservation in their local communities for the benefit of all Australians today, and for generations to come.


🌱 Nursery Open Day – This Saturday! 🌱

Join us this Saturday, 4th July from 9:00am at the Tamworth Regional Landcare Nursery for a fantastic morning celebrating native plants and sustainable living!
Browse our native nursery, grab a bargain at our $2 clearance sale on a wide range of native species, and take part in the Earth Oven & Earthbag Building Workshop hosted by the Tamworth Community Organic Gardeners.
We can’t wait to see you there!🌱💚


155 Trees Planted at Moore Creek Caves Reserve

Community spirit was on full display as Intrepid Landcare and Co-Exist came together with Friends of Moore Creek Caves for a successful tree planting day at Moore Creek Caves Reserve.

Our members often say that when you become part of Landcare, you’re not just joining a group, you’re becoming part of a family. The concept is so compatible with Australian culture it’s hard not to get involved! By becoming a TRLA member, you’ll be supporting our work, learning new skills, becoming part of the solution, and helping to make a difference for the future.

LEARN MORE LEARN MORE

together we can make a difference

funding support

Did you know (TRLA) run an Annual Small Grants program for Landcare activities connected to the Tamworth region.

Volunteer Landcare and Grassroots Community groups can apply up to $2,500 for activities that meet an objective of TRLA’s strategic plan with eight successful projects being awarded funds from across the region.

APPLY NOW APPLY NOW