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Soil condition classification using infrared spectroscopy: A proposition for assessment of soil condition along a tropical forest-cropland chronosequence
Authors:Alex O. Awiti  Markus G. Walsh  Keith D. Shepherd  Jenesio Kinyamario
Affiliation:1. Department of Land, Air and Water Resources, University of California Davis, Davis, CA, USA;2. Department of Soil, Environmental and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA;3. USDA-ARS, Central Great Plains Research Station, Akron, CO, USA;1. UCD School of Biosystems and Food Engineering, University College Dublin, Dublin 4, Ireland;2. Soil Security Laboratory, Department of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Agriculture and Environment, The University of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia;1. European Commission, Joint Research Centre, Institute for Environment and Sustainability, Ispra, Varese, Italy;2. Université de Liège – Ulg, Gembloux Agro-Bio Tech, Gembloux, Belgium;4. Georges Lemaître Centre for Earth and Climate Research, Earth and Life Institute, Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium;5. The James Hutton Institute, Aberdeen, United Kingdom;6. German Aerospace Agency (DLR), Weßling, Bavaria, Germany;7. Tel Aviv University (TAU), Tel Aviv, Israel;8. Washington State University (WSU), Pullman, WA, USA;9. Szent István University, Gödöll?, Hungary;10. Wallon Agricultural Research Centre (CRA-W), Gembloux, Belgium;71. Department of Agrochemistry and Environment, University Miguel Hernández, Valencia, Spain;84. Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark;95. Swiss Federal Research Institute (WSL), Birmensdorf, Switzerland;106. ISO/TC 190/SC 3/WG 10/Railway Technical Research Institute, Japan Railways, Tokyo, Japan;77. World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Nairobi, Kenya;88. Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Skara, Sweden;99. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), Rome, Italy;1. Tel Aviv University (TAU), Israel;2. CSIRO, Perth, Western Australia, Australia
Abstract:Soil fertility depletion in smallholder agricultural systems in sub-Saharan Africa presents a formidable challenge both for food production and environmental sustainability. A critical constraint to managing soils in sub-Saharan Africa is poor targeting of soil management interventions. This is partly due to lack of diagnostic tools for screening soil condition that would lead to a robust and repeatable spatially explicit case definition of poor soil condition. The objectives of this study were to: (i) evaluate the ability of near infrared spectroscopy to detect changes in soil properties across a forest-cropland chronosequence; and (ii) develop a heuristic scheme for the application of infrared spectroscopy as a tool for case definition and diagnostic screening of soil condition for agricultural and environmental management. Soil reflectance was measured for 582 topsoil samples collected from forest-cropland chronosequence age classes namely; forest, recently converted, RC (17 years) and historically converted, HC (ca.70 years). 130 randomly selected samples were used to calibrate soil properties to soil reflectance using partial least-squares regression (PLSR). 64 randomly selected samples were withheld for validation. A proportional odds logistic model was applied to chronosequence age classes and 10 principal components of spectral reflectance to determine three soil condition classes namely; “good”, “average” and “poor” for 194 samples. Discriminant analysis was applied to classify the remaining 388 “unknown” samples into soil condition classes using the 194 samples as a training set. Validation r2 values were: total C, 0.91; total N, 0.90; effective cation exchange capacity (ECEC), 0.90; exchangeable Ca, 0.85; clay content, 0.77; silt content, 0.77 exchangeable Mg, 0.76; soil pH, 0.72; and K, 0.64. A spectral based definition of “good”, “average” and “poor” soil condition classes provided a basis for an explicitly quantitative case definition of poor or degraded soils. Estimates of probabilities of membership of a sample in a spectral soil condition class presents an approach for probabilistic risk-based assessments of soil condition over large spatial scales. The study concludes that reflectance spectroscopy is rapid and offers the possibility for major efficiency and cost saving, permitting spectral case definition to define poor or degraded soils, leading to better targeting of management interventions.
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