Mulches such as Pine bark, cypress, tea tree, wood chip and hoop pine are what we class as high carbon, meaning that they have higher levels of carbon compared with mulches such as, sugar cane, pea-straw and lucerne.
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What is Nitrogen drawdown?
Nitrogen drawdown occurs when you put woody materials and mulches such as pine bark, cypress, tea tree and woodchip onto the soil surface. Soil micro-organisms, fungi and bacteria will actively start composting mulches as soon as they are laid. For these microbes to do that, they need to draw nutrients out of the soil. This is called nitrogen drawdown, because nitrogen is the major nutrient, they need to consume to help give them the energy to break down high carbon mulches. This results in a competition for nutrients between plant roots in the soil and the mulch that's sitting on top of it.
Nitrogen drawdown is the loss of nitrogen to plants in the presence of high amounts of carbon, resulting in slower growth and in extreme cases, deficiencies.
How to combat Nitrogen drawdown.
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