The soil food web is the natural ecosystem of organisms in soil that work together to cycle nutrients and support plant growth.

WHAT IS THE SOIL FOOD WEB?

The soil food web includes bacteria, fungi, protozoa, nematodes, arthropods, earthworms, and other organisms that break down organic matter and convert nutrients into forms plants can absorb.

Plants feed these organisms through root exudates, and in return the soil life feeds the plant.

HOW IT’S USED

Growers support the soil food web by:

It is a foundational concept in living soil and organic growing.

WHY IT MATTERS

A healthy soil food web:

Instead of force-feeding nutrients, growers rely on biology to regulate plant nutrition naturally.

LIMITATIONS & NOTES

The soil food web takes time to develop and can be disrupted by overwatering, compaction, or excessive use of synthetic nutrients. It is most effective in systems designed to support long-term soil life.