Sandy soil because there is nothing to stop it from being moved.
Sandy soils are much more permeable that clay soils.
Sandy clay loam (SCL) is a soil texture. A soil texture is a specific mixture of sand, silt and clay particles. SCL can have 74 to 80% sand and 20 to 35% clay. See the link on soil texture for more.
A kind of soil which can be eroded more easily is clay soil.
Sand soil
In order for soil to increase its ability to hold water it must have a higher amount of clay present in it. The more clay present in the soil, the more water it will hold. The opposite to this is how sandy or grainy the soil is, if it is too sandy then it will not hold water very well.
Sandy soils are much more permeable that clay soils.
Clay soils hold more nutrients, while sandy soils quickly have their nutrients leached by rain.
Sandy clay loam (SCL) is a soil texture. A soil texture is a specific mixture of sand, silt and clay particles. SCL can have 74 to 80% sand and 20 to 35% clay. See the link on soil texture for more.
Sandy soils are generally less fertile than clay soils because they do not hold water as well as clay soils. Clay soils are usually fertile and hold more nutrients than sandy soils.
Their both the same, really, just two different names for sand with clay in it, however one might have more clay in one (sandy clay) than the other (clayey sand), but only by miniscule amounts.
sandy soil drains water
osmosis plasmolysis capillary action envirroment Surface area of the clay is higher than the sandy soil so it adsorbs/absorbs more moisture
A kind of soil which can be eroded more easily is clay soil.
Sandy soils are generally less fertile than clay soils because they do not hold water as well as clay soils. Clay soils are usually fertile and hold more nutrients than sandy soils.
Sand soil
In order for soil to increase its ability to hold water it must have a higher amount of clay present in it. The more clay present in the soil, the more water it will hold. The opposite to this is how sandy or grainy the soil is, if it is too sandy then it will not hold water very well.
Drainage is a reason why nematodes affect plants is sandy soil more than in clay or loam. Clay or loam may end up retaining too much water for the roundworms in question. Infiltration and percolation of water tends to be faster and non-saturating in sandy soils, which offer a drier environment, which adult nematodes prefer for ensuring the next generation's sustainability.