Fungal:Bacterial Ratio
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 4 benchmarks together — the OptimalRange form drives the primary score, while 3 guard(s) constrain the result.
Contributing Benchmarks
Evidence & Context
The reference value of ~0.6 (PLFA-based) is derived from undisturbed rainforest sites in North Queensland, representing the best available condition for this biome.
Ratio of Fungal PLFA to Bacterial PLFA in soil microbial biomass
This benchmark represents the typical fungal to bacterial biomass ratio in soil microbial communities of undisturbed tropical and subtropical rainforest forests in Australia under conservation management, indicating a healthy fungal-balanced system.
Derived from recent, peer-reviewed field data from undisturbed rainforest sites in North Queensland reflecting a healthy fungal-balanced system.
Sources (3)
(PDF) Relative to rainforests and grasslands, banana and ..., accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceSoil Fungal:Bacterial Ratios Are Linked to Altered Carbon Cycling - Frontiers, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceAustralian dryland soils are acidic and nutrient-depleted, and have unique microbial communities compared with other drylands - PMC, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceSupporting Sources (19)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
(PDF) Managing a World Heritage Site in the Face of Climate Change: A Case Study of the Wet Tropics in Northern Queensland - ResearchGate, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceSoil microbial community composition under Eucalyptus plantations of different age in subtropical China - ResearchGate, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceAnalyzing your Fungal to Bacterial Ratio Results - microBIOMETER, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceAre Fungal to Bacterial Ratios (F:B Ratio) Important for Plant Growth? - Garden Myths, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceFungal/bacterial ratios in grasslands with contrasting nitrogen management, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceHow should we manage our soils to increase soil carbon?, accessed May 10, 2026
View SourceMechanisms and implications of bacterial–fungal competition for soil resources - PMC, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceContrasting Soil pH Effects on Fungal and Bacterial Growth Suggest Functional Redundancy in Carbon Mineralization | Applied and Environmental Microbiology - ASM Journals, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceConverting tropical rainforest to native rubber plantations alters soil bacterial and fungal communities - Maximum Academic Press, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceSoil health: the foundation of sustainable agriculture - 2001 ...
View SourceEcology of streams in a biogeographic isolate—the Queensland Wet Tropics, Australia - ResearchOnline@JCU, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceRelative to rainforests and grasslands, banana and sugarcane soils ..., accessed July 23, 2025
View Source(PDF) The measurement of soil fungal:bacterial biomass ratios as an indicator of ecosystem self-regulation in temperate meadow grasslands - ResearchGate, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceManaging a World Heritage Site in the Face of Climate Change: A Case Study of the Wet Tropics in Northern Queensland - MDPI, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceModified fungal diversity in dense clay subsoils after deep-banding organic substrate - CSIRO Publishing, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceD11 Control of Erosion and Sedimentation (Design) - Wingecarribee Shire Council
View SourceTropical Rainforest Restoration Plantations Are Slow to Restore the Soil Biological and Organic Carbon Characteristics of Old Growth Rainforest - PMC, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceUnravelling the effects of tropical land use conversion on the soil microbiome, accessed July 23, 2025
View SourceWet Tropics of Queensland - UNESCO World Heritage Centre, accessed July 23, 2025
View Source