Microbial Biomass Carbon (MBC)
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 5 benchmarks together — the OptimalRange form drives the primary score, while 4 guard(s) constrain the result.
Contributing Benchmarks
Evidence & Context
Based on the derived benchmark of 630 mg/kg, the optimal functional range for sustainable production forestry in this biome can be defined as approximately 450 – 700 mg/kg.
Range of Microbial Biomass Carbon (MBC) representing a healthy, resilient, and well-functioning ecosystem.
This benchmark defines the optimal functional range of Microbial Biomass Carbon for sustainable production forestry in the Arid Mountain Ranges & Uplands biome, indicating a healthy and resilient ecosystem.
The optimal range represents a healthy, resilient system operating near its attainable potential for the biome, supported by best-practice sustainable management.
Sources (1)
Gilgunia Station - Building Landscape resilience you can bank on - Soils For Life, accessed July 28, 2025,
View SourceSupporting Sources (19)
Additional references from the underlying research that informed this benchmark.
2.2.1 Soil microbial biomass – C, N, and P - ClimEx Handbook
View SourceSoil health and stability monitoring in forests - Natural Resources Commission, accessed July 30, 2025
View SourceSustainable forest management: the Australian context - DAFF, accessed July 12, 2025,
View SourceRoot Structure and Functioning for Efficient Acquisition of Phosphorus: Matching Morphological and Physiological Traits
View SourceBulk Density - Measurement | Fact Sheets | soilquality.org.au, accessed July 26, 2025,
View SourceNVIS Fact sheet MVG 19 – Tussock grasslands, accessed May 19, 2025,
View SourceCoarse woody debris reduces the rate of moisture loss from surface soils of cleared temperate Australian woodlands - CSIRO PUBLISHING | Soil Research, accessed August 28, 2025,
View SourceBiological Mechanisms May Contribute to Soil Carbon Saturation
View SourceInterpreting Microbial Biomass Carbon | Fact Sheets | soilquality.org.au, accessed July 18, 2025,
View SourceStarting / Enhancing Your Regenerative Agriculture Journey, accessed August 13, 2025,
View SourceAustralian dryland soils are acidic and nutrient-depleted, and have unique microbial communities compared with other drylands - PMC, accessed August 28, 2025,
View SourceGlobal negative effects of nitrogen deposition on soil microbes - PMC
View SourceMapping soil organic carbon fractions for Australia, their stocks, and uncertainty - BG, accessed July 16, 2025,
View SourceSoil condition | NSW State of the Environment
View SourceSoil microbial biomass carbon and CO2? - ResearchGate, accessed July 18, 2025,
View SourceSoil microbial biomass, metabolic quotient, and carbon and nitrogen mineralisation in 25-year-old Pinus radiata agroforestry regimes - CSIRO Publishing
View SourceAustralia's Sustainable Forest Management - DAFF
View SourceAustralia's Voluntary National Contribution to the United Nations Global Forest Goals – 2 April 2019
View SourceUnderstanding and quantifying whole soil-profile organic carbon transfer using an environmental tracer - CSIRO Publishing
View Source