What mode of plant lives on loam soil? i have a project please help me

i have a project please help me
Loam is the favorite of most all plants that prefer soil. Every plant you can regard as of except for water plants, air plants and the parasitic types can live contained by loam soil.


Most plants will thrive on a standard loam soil, although ericaceous plants need an bitter loam to flourish, as they are not able to uptake nutrients from a soil that is not caustic. Ericaceous plants include Azaleas, Rhododendrons and Pieris (though this is a little less fussy than the others).

Incorporate as much natural matter, to help the soil retain sea better, as well as for it to increase the nutrient level, if it's composted plant concern or animal fertiliser that you're adding.

Otherwise, loam is mainly another word for soil, so don't seize too concerned about this word, more accurately it's a mix of sand, silt and clay, rather than a more restricted soil, such as only clay or sand.

Hope this helps. Good luck! Rob
Answers:    My entire dairy dairy farm is loam soil here in northwest Wisconsin.
In zone 3, so whatever go well in that zone.
Alfalfa, corn, soybeans, oats, winter wheat, timothy, orchard grass, canary grass, sorgum grass, etc.
trees, red oak, pin oak, ash, locust,maple (soft & hard), walnut, butternut, apple, plum, pear, cherry, colorado blue spruce, white pine, norway spruce, birch, boxelder, etc.
Azalia's & blueberry have need of soil adjustment to acidic.
Wild berry, I have dignified bush cranberries, dewberry, grape, choke cherry trees, black cap, wild raspberry.
Wild flowers, daylilies, tiger lilies, black eyed susans, ferns.
Wide hotchpotch of weeds, black nightshade, pig weed, quackgrass, milkweed, ragweed, lambs quarter, foxtail, proso millet, etc.