Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia

Soil colour is often used as a general purpose indicator of internal soil drainage. In this study we developed a necessarily simple model of soil drainage which combines the tacit knowledge of the soil surveyor with observed matrix soil colour descriptions. From built up knowledge of the soils in ou...

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Main Authors: Brendan P. Malone, Alex B. McBratney, Budiman Minasny
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2018-04-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/4659.pdf
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spelling doaj-c74692782fb64cfc8292df70c23368c82020-11-24T22:58:06ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592018-04-016e465910.7717/peerj.4659Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, AustraliaBrendan P. MaloneAlex B. McBratneyBudiman MinasnySoil colour is often used as a general purpose indicator of internal soil drainage. In this study we developed a necessarily simple model of soil drainage which combines the tacit knowledge of the soil surveyor with observed matrix soil colour descriptions. From built up knowledge of the soils in our Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales study area, the sequence of well-draining → imperfectly draining → poorly draining soils generally follows the colour sequence of red → brown → yellow → grey → black soil matrix colours. For each soil profile, soil drainage is estimated somewhere on a continuous index of between 5 (very well drained) and 1 (very poorly drained) based on the proximity or similarity to reference soil colours of the soil drainage colour sequence. The estimation of drainage index at each profile incorporates the whole-profile descriptions of soil colour where necessary, and is weighted such that observation of soil colour at depth and/or dominantly observed horizons are given more preference than observations near the soil surface. The soil drainage index, by definition disregards surficial soil horizons and consolidated and semi-consolidated parent materials. With the view to understanding the spatial distribution of soil drainage we digitally mapped the index across our study area. Spatial inference of the drainage index was made using Cubist regression tree model combined with residual kriging. Environmental covariates for deterministic inference were principally terrain variables derived from a digital elevation model. Pearson’s correlation coefficients indicated the variables most strongly correlated with soil drainage were topographic wetness index (−0.34), mid-slope position (−0.29), multi-resolution valley bottom flatness index (−0.29) and vertical distance to channel network (VDCN) (0.26). From the regression tree modelling, two linear models of soil drainage were derived. The partitioning of models was based upon threshold criteria of VDCN. Validation of the regression kriging model using a withheld dataset resulted in a root mean square error of 0.90 soil drainage index units. Concordance between observations and predictions was 0.49. Given the scale of mapping, and inherent subjectivity of soil colour description, these results are acceptable. Furthermore, the spatial distribution of soil drainage predicted in our study area is attuned with our mental model developed over successive field surveys. Our approach, while exclusively calibrated for the conditions observed in our study area, can be generalised once the unique soil colour and soil drainage relationship is expertly defined for an area or region in question. With such rules established, the quantitative components of the method would remain unchanged.https://peerj.com/articles/4659.pdfDigital soil mappingSoil colourColour spaceSoil drainageCIELABMunsell colours
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Brendan P. Malone
Alex B. McBratney
Budiman Minasny
spellingShingle Brendan P. Malone
Alex B. McBratney
Budiman Minasny
Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
PeerJ
Digital soil mapping
Soil colour
Colour space
Soil drainage
CIELAB
Munsell colours
author_facet Brendan P. Malone
Alex B. McBratney
Budiman Minasny
author_sort Brendan P. Malone
title Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
title_short Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
title_full Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
title_fullStr Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales, Australia
title_sort description and spatial inference of soil drainage using matrix soil colours in the lower hunter valley, new south wales, australia
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Soil colour is often used as a general purpose indicator of internal soil drainage. In this study we developed a necessarily simple model of soil drainage which combines the tacit knowledge of the soil surveyor with observed matrix soil colour descriptions. From built up knowledge of the soils in our Lower Hunter Valley, New South Wales study area, the sequence of well-draining → imperfectly draining → poorly draining soils generally follows the colour sequence of red → brown → yellow → grey → black soil matrix colours. For each soil profile, soil drainage is estimated somewhere on a continuous index of between 5 (very well drained) and 1 (very poorly drained) based on the proximity or similarity to reference soil colours of the soil drainage colour sequence. The estimation of drainage index at each profile incorporates the whole-profile descriptions of soil colour where necessary, and is weighted such that observation of soil colour at depth and/or dominantly observed horizons are given more preference than observations near the soil surface. The soil drainage index, by definition disregards surficial soil horizons and consolidated and semi-consolidated parent materials. With the view to understanding the spatial distribution of soil drainage we digitally mapped the index across our study area. Spatial inference of the drainage index was made using Cubist regression tree model combined with residual kriging. Environmental covariates for deterministic inference were principally terrain variables derived from a digital elevation model. Pearson’s correlation coefficients indicated the variables most strongly correlated with soil drainage were topographic wetness index (−0.34), mid-slope position (−0.29), multi-resolution valley bottom flatness index (−0.29) and vertical distance to channel network (VDCN) (0.26). From the regression tree modelling, two linear models of soil drainage were derived. The partitioning of models was based upon threshold criteria of VDCN. Validation of the regression kriging model using a withheld dataset resulted in a root mean square error of 0.90 soil drainage index units. Concordance between observations and predictions was 0.49. Given the scale of mapping, and inherent subjectivity of soil colour description, these results are acceptable. Furthermore, the spatial distribution of soil drainage predicted in our study area is attuned with our mental model developed over successive field surveys. Our approach, while exclusively calibrated for the conditions observed in our study area, can be generalised once the unique soil colour and soil drainage relationship is expertly defined for an area or region in question. With such rules established, the quantitative components of the method would remain unchanged.
topic Digital soil mapping
Soil colour
Colour space
Soil drainage
CIELAB
Munsell colours
url https://peerj.com/articles/4659.pdf
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