Soil pH
Benchmark Value
Scoring Curve
This curve shows how a field measurement for this indicator would score across all available benchmark forms in this context. The scoring engine uses 15 benchmarks together — the OptimalRange form drives the primary score, while 14 guard(s) constrain the result.
Evidence & Context
Considering these factors, an increase in soil pH (1:5 H₂O) consistently above pH 6.0 - 6.5 could be considered detrimental for naturally acidic Australian alpine and subalpine ecosystems that have an optimal range of pH 4.5-5.5.
Upper detrimental soil pH threshold above which ecological integrity is compromised due to nutrient imbalances and invasive species establishment.
This benchmark defines the critical upper soil pH limit above which Australian alpine ecosystems face ecological harm from altered nutrient cycles and invasive species.
Based on evidence linking pH above this range to nutrient deficiencies, invasive species, and altered microbial communities.
Sources (1)
Climate change impacts on our soils - AdaptNSW
View SourceSupporting Sources (18)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
Caritat, P. de, & Cooper, M. (2011). The pH of Australian soils: Field results from a national survey. Soil Research, 49, 172-182.
View SourceImpacts of Road Disturbance on Soil Properties and on Exotic Plant ...
View SourceArctic, Antarctic, and Alpine Research. (2005). Recovery of Alpine Vegetation from Grazing and Drought. 8
View SourceAustralian Government / ALA. (2023). Conservation actions for Australian alpine and sub-alpine peatlands. 25
View SourceAustralian Journal of Ecology. (2006). Vegetation of an alkaline pan - acidic peat mosaic in the Hardwood River Valley, Tasmania. 17
View SourceAustralian Alps National Parks. (2013). Soils of the Australian Alps (Fact Sheet). 9
View SourceNCBI / PMC. (2024/2025). Effect of simulated acidification on soil basic chemical properties. PMC11994667. 20
View SourceTurner, B. L., et al. (2014). Soil organic phosphorus speciation in Australian alpine and sub-alpine soils. Journal of Soils and Sediments.
View SourceFrontiers in Plant Science. (2013). Aluminum (Al) cation Al3+ is highly rhizotoxic and is a major stress factor to plants on acid soils. 5
View Sourcewww.nrc.nsw.gov.au, accessed on May 27, 2025
View Sourcewww.climatechange.environment.nsw.gov.au
View SourceNCBI / PMC. (2021). Ecosystem index score for the reference, treated and untreated zones in Alpine National Park. PMC8367960. 11
View SourceWhat do you see and when? What could this indicate? What test can I do to confirm? - MLA
View SourceFreiburg University. (2012). Plant and soil P determine functional attributes of subalpine Australian plants. 13
View SourceCSIRO. (2021). Soil and Landscape Grid National Soil Attribute Maps - pH - CaCl2. 26
View SourceSoil pH | Environment, land and water - Queensland Government, accessed August 11, 2025,
View SourceSoil Conservation in Alpine Catchments - The Kosciuszko Huts Association, accessed August 17, 2025,
View SourceVictorian Resources Online. Soils of Suggan Buggan/Buchan. 18
View Source