Thank you all for this information. It seems that a higher cec goes hand in hand with higher water retention except for charcoal (according to the chart). I'd always thought charcoal would hold quite a bit of water. I wonder if the chart is assuming a certain particle size? The charcoal I have probably averages 1/12" - 1/8" in size.
I just mixed up some turface, diatomaceous earth, fir bark, and charcoal in equal parts to test on a couple tropical plants (not bonsai). Seems the ph may be on the high side but that cec and water retention will be amazing!
Wish me luck
CEC = cation exchange capacity is the ability to hold charged ions. CEC is an electrochemical property of the potting media. It has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with water holding or water retention. The two are independant, unrelated traits.
That is why charcoal can have a higher CEC and a lower water retention capacity. One has nothing to do with the other.
Except. CEC is a property of a surface. Charcoal has many bonding sites available on its surfaces. Charcoal, typical hardwood charcoal, is not all that open, it does not have many internal surfaces. So it can not hold a lot of water. Its surfaces are fairly dense with bonding sites available for CEC. So charcoal holds little water but has a high CEC.
Something like Diatomaceous earth, has many surfaces, as it has thousands of tiny pores. The tiny pores means that there are many internal spaces in which to hold water. The number of bonding sites available for CEC is fairly low density, BUT because of the huge internal surface area of porous diatomaceous earth, there is a lot of CEC, and it holds a lot of water.
The two traits, water holding capacity, and water retention are not linked to each other. The property of internal surface area, and the density of CEC available bonding sites is where the two traits seem to be links, through the effect of amount of internal surface area.
While much is made of CEC, in terms of horticulture, simple adjustments in how we grow our trees makes CEC largely an issue that can be ignored.
If your water quality is good, CEC is a trivial issue. You can use low CEC media and simply just fertilize your trees more often. No big deal.
IF you are trying to compensate for very hard water, by using a high CEC media, well then CEC does become important.
For the vast majority of growers, with medium hardness irrigation water to soft rain water, CEC is a trivial problem that is safe to completely ignore. Only those trying to compensate for hard water is CEC something worth worrying about.