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Deep Dive - Agronomy Services
By
Agri Business Review | Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Executives overseeing land acquisition and farm performance face a less visible challenge than commodity prices or weather: accurately assessing existing soil assets before investing. While topsoil is often evaluated for yield or compliance, its micronutrient composition is rarely considered as a distinct asset. This oversight is significant. Micronutrients such as zinc, boron, manganese, copper, and affect crop response, long-term soil management, and, under certain regulations, the economic treatment of land.
Most soil testing focuses on macronutrients for immediate fertility, providing data for planting but not for strategic decisions about land value, capital allocation, or tax exposure. This gap challenges executives managing large operations or expanding portfolios. Land is often assessed by price per acre and expected yield, while the underlying nutrient inventory remains undocumented and excluded from financial planning.
A disciplined approach to micronutrient analysis addresses this issue. Professionally collected and benchmarked soil samples can reveal excess micronutrient concentrations that impact land valuation. This data provides a clearer understanding of soil potential across various land types and generates documentation to support discussions with accountants, lenders, and advisors regarding balance sheet treatment. Accuracy and defensibility depend on rigorous sampling, specialized laboratories, and scientific oversight.
Consistency of methodology is equally important. Micronutrient levels vary widely within a single property especially consistent methodology is essential. Micronutrient levels can vary significantly within a property, especially in wooded areas, river bottoms, or unmanaged tracts. Comprehensive sampling and interpretation help avoid overgeneralization and ensure decisions are based on accurate data, not misleading averages. Executives gain when analysis converts raw data into clear valuation logic supported by specialized laboratory partnerships and soil science expertise. The firm focuses on translating soil data into clear valuation documentation that can be integrated into existing financial and advisory processes. Its emphasis remains narrow by design, focusing on micronutrient analysis rather than generalized agronomy or yield consulting, thereby strengthening the credibility of its findings. The resulting reports are structured to withstand external scrutiny and to support informed discussions with tax and legal professionals.
For organizations acquiring or managing agricultural land, this approach provides a practical advantage. It enables decision-makers to identify existing value, reduce unnecessary capital expenditures, and make more informed land purchases. While disciplined micronutrient analysis does not immediately alter farming practices, it changes how land is evaluated. Legacy Soil & Land Advisors is a strong choice for executives seeking rigorous insight into soil-based value rather than relying on surface-level assumptions.