Fiber optic cables reveal a serious problem at the heart of modern farming
5 hours ago
- #Soil Health
- #Sustainability
- #Agriculture
- Tilling soil, a practice dating back thousands of years, initially boosted agriculture by improving soil fertility and weed control.
- Long-term tilling degrades soil, reduces water retention, and increases reliance on synthetic fertilizers, harming the environment.
- Fiber optic cables and Distributed Acoustic Sensing (DAS) reveal tilling destroys soil capillaries, crucial for water retention.
- Regenerative farming practices like no-till, cover crops, and crop diversity can reduce agrochemical use and improve soil health.
- DAS technology uses fiber optic cables to detect disturbances, turning them into continuous sensors for seismic and agricultural monitoring.
- Tilled soils, despite appearing loose, actually absorb less water due to destroyed natural structures like worm and root holes.
- Farmers traditionally plow to control weeds and boost short-term fertility, but this leads to long-term soil degradation.
- Synthetic fertilizers, while addressing soil deficiencies, contribute to global warming and waterway pollution.
- Regenerative agriculture solutions include livestock grazing, cover crops, compost use, and increasing crop diversity to enhance soil health.
- Adopting regenerative practices can reduce agrochemical reliance, increase biodiversity, lower pollution, and make farms more profitable.