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



New England & North West Landcare Adventure 2023

We are pleased to invite you to join us for the upcoming Landcare Conference! This event will explore the latest innovations, strategies, and best practices in landcare and conservation. We will have a variety of experts giving engaging presentations, offering interactive workshops, and engaging in meaningful dialogue. This is an excellent opportunity to learn from and collaborate with like-minded individuals and organizations as we strive to care for and protect our land and its resources. We hope to see you there!


NE & NW Landcare Awards Nominations Now Open

These awards are your chance to recognise an outstanding person or group within the New England or North West region who is working to conserve our natural environment and/or sustainable, regenerate farming systems. Let them know their work is appreciated and values.


Easter Sale at the Nursery

There is a great deal of moisture in the ground and still lots of warmth so it is the perfect time to plant. The Nurseray is located on 300 Wallamore Road, Westdale. Feel free to message our Nursery Manager Paul Moxon on 0425 337 475


Landcare Learning - The catch with cats -Feline Offenders

Please join us as we put a spotlight on the issue of feral, stray and roaming cats. What is the impact of cats on native species and local biodiversity? What are the options for control on rural properties and in our local neighborhoods?


Water Hub

TRLA, council and UNE partner to research water run-off


Clean up Australia Day

Join in to clean up along our beautiful peel river and take part in tree planting to Promote biodiversity with Tamworth Urban Landcare Group.

Plant propagation workshop

Plant propagation workshop

Learn from Paul Moxon our Nursery horticulturist and native species expert. he will show you how to grow native plants by cuttings. Morning Tea will be provided. Please wear sturdy shoes.
RSVP to nursery@trla.org.au.


Tree Planting Service

Ideal erosion control and riparian rehabilitation, dam plantings and tree corridors.


Native Plant ID Day

Grasses, forbs, herbs, weeds! Learn the names, nutritional value, growing periods, seasonal variation, toxicity of the plants in our pastures and what they tell us about the soil beneath.
These workshops will offer advice on how to build your own herbarium and the opportunity to collect specimens.


Free Koala Friendly Trees

Tamworth Regional Landcare Association’s Koala Committee are looking for up to 20 peri urban and rural property owners to receive between 20 and 80 Koala friendly trees for planting on their properties.


Small Grant EOI - Now OPEN

This years TRLA Small Grants round is now open 


Landcare farming Program Benchmarking Soils Project

This project started 2022, with nine interested landowners wanting to gain knowledge and understanding about their soil and increasing carbon with pasture management.


Native Grains Industry

Revitalised native grain industry gaining momentum in the Northwest. Northwest NSW is known for producing high-quality grain.


What has happened to the koalas around Gunnedah?

This film explores what lead to the steep decline in the koala population in the last 15 years and the work of Local Land Services, researchers and community groups who are trying to assist in koala population recovery across the Liverpool Plains.


Say no to Sox and Jox this Christmas!

If you have a dear relative who always buys you Sox and Jocks each and every year, why not suggest they Gift you a few trees on your behalf instead!
It’s a gift that lasts for generations and for just $20 - it will buy 4 trees in your name !

To Gift a Tree (or 4) this Christmas visit:


Welcome to our New Regional Agricultural Landcare Facilitator

We would like to introduce our newest addition to the TRLA team, Sarah Carter. Sarah is our new RALF taking over from Lana. 

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year

Christmas operating hours

TRLA will be closed from Friday 23 December until January 3, 2023.


Seed Collection Field Trip

Native seed collection field trip with Paul Moxon from TRLA Nursery

Location change for this Sunday's TULG Working Bee

Location change for this Sunday's TULG Working Bee

Due to the recent flooding we won't be meeting at the the Peel river, instead we will have a working bee at the Nursery at 300 Wallamore Road from 8.30am-12.30pm.


Propagation Workshop October 2022 was a huge success

The propagation workshop was a great success with nearly 30 attendees...


Critters & Constellations

Please join us for our AGM and an afternoon of critters and constellations. 

RSVP here https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/critters-and-constellation-tickets-453485195427


Regenerative Agriculture Field day at Timor

Local Land Services will be holding a Regenerative Agriculture Field day at Timor. To book contact Nikki Gilder - P: 0476 796 729E: nicola.gilder@lls.nsw.g

Get your tickets here Regenerative Agriculture Field Day Tickets, Thu, Oct 27, 2022 at 9:00 AM | Eventbrite


Pull your head in...

Discover stunning Bells Turtle habitat and on-farm biodiversity monitoring with Ecologist Phil Spark. 

For more information please contact Susan Wilson on 0400 590 776. 

Registration essential

https://www.eventbrite.com.au/e/discover-a-stunning-bells-turtle-habitat-on-the-mcdonald-river-tickets-432393409327


Naxas Quartet

Upper Peel Landcare Group is thrilled to partner with Music in the Regions to bring Naxas Quartet to Nundle on Saturday November 5th, 2022. BYO drinks and snacks. Cheese plates for sale.

Book your tickets here https://events.humanitix.com/nexas-quartet-the-french-saxophone-nundle?fbclid=IwAR1sqanoX6FeE58XCOKVSluY-1Cbw9KE8cJkMtD1NHLdP2ugO5pB9WvRqZE

Prpagation Workshop

Prpagation Workshop

Sunday October 23, 2022 at 8.30am - 12.30pm - 300 Wallamore Road.

Learn from Paul Moxon our Nursery horticulturist and native species expert. He will show you how to sow native seed and take cuttings, Morning Tea will be provided. Please wear sturdy shoes.

RSVP to nursery@trla.org.au.


Funding opportunity

Projects of up to $25K are being sought (this is NOT limited to formal Landcare groups but rather Landcarers).

Applications for this this Landcare Farming Program Expression of Interest will close on Monday 24th of October. 

Save the date for the AGM

Save the date for the AGM

This years AGM will be held on November 19. More information to come soon


Seen a koala recently in the North West? Let LLS know

North West Local Land Services would like to hear from anyone in the North West slopes region (Barraba to Wallabadah) who has seen a koala in the past three years.


EOI for the Small Grants Program Closing Soon

EOI for the Small Grants Program will be ending on September 30. So if you haven't already submitted your EOI please do it as soon as possible. 


Native Vegetation Identification

Learn more about the plants in our pastures and the soils beneath.

When: Saturday 8th October 2022
Where: 58 Koorooya Road, Somerton 2340 NSW
Time: 9.00am - 1.00pm


Small Grants Program now open

We are excited to announce that this years round of our small grants program is now open. Volunteer Landcare, Grassroots Community groups and organisations can apply for up to $2,500 for activities that meet an objective of TRLA’s strategic plan. Applications close on September 30, 2022 with successful applicants being announced on November 19th.

Carbon Forum 2022

Carbon Forum 2022

'Let's Talk About Soil Carbon'. Over two days in Narrabri and Tamworth, 125 landholders from across the North West had the privilege of hearing from innovator, leader, pioneer and change-maker Dr Terry McCosker from RCS and CarbonLink. It was inspiring, challenging but most of all motivating. Along with the science, we also heard about opportunities for carbon projects from CarbonLink, Climate Friendly and South Pole. A big thank you to all our wonderful speakers and to everyone who attended. Proudly supported by Tamworth Regional Landcare Association and Northern Slopes Landcare Association Inc.


Landcare Learning

We would like to invite you to our next Landcare Learning Session on Tuesday September 20 at 6pm. Venue is McCulloch Agencies on corner of Kable Avenue and Brisbane Street. We look forward to seeing you there. 


Northwest Carbon Forums

Learn about carbon sequestration and accessing carbon markets on 8th September Crossing Theatre Narrabri and 9th September Powerhouse Hotel Tamworth.
Northwest Landcare through funding from the State and Federal Governments are thrilled to host world leading soil carbon sequestration expert Dr Terry McCosker, to share his knowledge with local landholders on the latest research and information on sustainable soil practices.


Across the paddock

‘Across the Paddock’ is aimed at bringing Landcarers and the community across the north west all the latest in natural resource management news, what’s happening in the agricultural sector, plus events, funding, articles and more! 


Grassy White Box Woodland Restoration

Grassy White Box Woodlands provide habitat for over 60 threatened species such as the Bush Stone-Curlew and the Squirrel Glider and they are an important source of food and habitat for three nationally threatened bird species (Regent Honeyeater, Superb and Swift Parrots).

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