Predictive ability of soil properties to spectral degradation from laboratory Vis-NIR spectroscopy data

被引:79
|
作者
Adeline, K. R. M. [1 ]
Gomez, C. [1 ]
Gorretta, N. [2 ]
Roger, J. -M. [2 ]
机构
[1] IRD, UMR LISAH INRA IRD SupAgro, F-34060 Montpellier, France
[2] IRSTEA, UMR ITAP, BP 5095, F-34196 Montpellier 5, France
关键词
Laboratory Vis-NIR spectroscopy; Soil properties; Physico-chemical features; Partial least squares regression; Spectral resolution; PARTIAL LEAST-SQUARES; NEAR-INFRARED SPECTROSCOPY; ORGANIC-CARBON; PRINCIPAL COMPONENT; REFLECTANCE; REGRESSION; PACKAGE; CLAY;
D O I
10.1016/j.geoderma.2016.11.010
中图分类号
S15 [土壤学];
学科分类号
0903 ; 090301 ;
摘要
Laboratory Visible-Near Infrared (Vis-NIR) spectroscopy is a good alternative to costly physical and chemical soil analysis to estimate a wide range of soil properties. Various statistical methods relate soil Vis-NIR spectra to soil properties including partial least-squares regression (PLSR), the most common"multivariate statistical technique in soil science. Most efforts are generally dedicated to the comparison of methodologies and their optimization for the estimation of soil properties. Instead, the focus of this paper is to assess the prediction of soil properties from laboratory Vis-NIR spectroscopy data in regards to spectral degradation. Consecutively, both spectra quality and PLSR models quality are analyzed across the definition of different spectral configurations, each one characterized by three parameters: the number of spectral bands, the spectral resolution and the spectral sampling interval. The originality of this work is to perform this study on four soil properties with different spectral absorption features due to their various physico-chemical interactions with soil substrate, namely: clay, free iron oxides, calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and pH. The initial database is composed of 1961 spectral bands, spectral resolutions of 3 and 10 nm in the 400-1000 nm and 1000-2500 nm ranges, respectively, with a resampled spectral interval of 1 nm. Seven degraded spectral configurations were built from this reference database with a number of spectral bands decreasing from 328 to 10, a spectral resolution decreasing from 3 nm to 200 nm, and a spectral sampling interval equaling the spectral resolution (i.e., uniform interval sampling). All of these databases were composed of 148 soil samples collected at a Mediterranean site. PLSR predicted the four selected soil properties, and the results were as follows: (1) the prediction performances of the PLSR models were accurate and globally stable with a spectral resolution between 3 and 60 nm regardless of the soil properties (R-2 decreased from 0.8 to 0.77 for clay, from 0.88 to 0.84 for CaCO3, from 0.66 to 4158 for pH and remained constant at 0.78 for iron), (2) the prediction performances decreased, but remained acceptable for clay, iron oxides and CaCO3 at spectral resolutions between 60 and 200 nm (R-2 > 0.7), (3) the sensitivity of a given soil property to spectral configurations depended on its spectral features and correlations with other soil properties. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:143 / 153
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Effect of calibration set size on prediction at local scale of soil carbon by Vis-NIR spectroscopy
    Luca, Federica
    Conforti, Massimo
    Castrignano, Annamaria
    Matteucci, Giorgio
    Buttafuoco, Gabriele
    GEODERMA, 2017, 288 : 175 - 183
  • [32] Soil Catena Characterization using pXRF and Vis-NIR Spectroscopy in Northwest Turkey
    Gozukara, G.
    Hartemink, A. E.
    Zhang, Y.
    EURASIAN SOIL SCIENCE, 2021, 54 (SUPPL 1) : S1 - S15
  • [33] Development of a soil fertility index using on-line Vis-NIR spectroscopy
    Munnaf, Muhammad Abdul
    Mouazen, Abdul Mounem
    COMPUTERS AND ELECTRONICS IN AGRICULTURE, 2021, 188
  • [34] Integration of vis-NIR and pXRF spectroscopy for rapid measurement of soil lead concentrations
    Pozza, L. E.
    Bishop, T. F. A.
    Stockmann, U.
    Birch, G. F.
    SOIL RESEARCH, 2020, 58 (03) : 247 - 257
  • [35] Vis-NIR Spectroscopy for Soil Organic Carbon Assessment: A Meta-Analysis
    Chinilin, A. V.
    Vindeker, G. V.
    Savin, I. Yu.
    EURASIAN SOIL SCIENCE, 2023, 56 (11) : 1605 - 1617
  • [36] Prediction of Soil Properties with PLSR and vis-NIR Spectroscopy: Application to Mediterranean Soils from Southern Italy
    Leone, Antonio P.
    Viscarra-Rossel, Raphael A.
    Amenta, Pietro
    Buondonno, Andrea
    CURRENT ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 2012, 8 (02) : 283 - 299
  • [37] Application of Spectrally Derived Soil Type as Ancillary Data to Improve the Estimation of Soil Organic Carbon by Using the Chinese Soil Vis-NIR Spectral Library
    Liu, Yi
    Shi, Zhou
    Zhang, Ganlin
    Chen, Yiyun
    Li, Shuo
    Hong, Yongshen
    Shi, Tiezhu
    Wang, Junjie
    Liu, Yaolin
    REMOTE SENSING, 2018, 10 (11):
  • [38] Depth-Specific Prediction of Soil Properties In Situ using vis-NIR Spectroscopy
    Zhang, Yakun
    Biswas, Asim
    Ji, Wenjun
    Adamchuk, Viacheslav I.
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2017, 81 (05) : 993 - 1004
  • [39] Comparison of Depth-Specific Prediction of Soil Properties: MIR vs. Vis-NIR Spectroscopy
    Shi, Zhan
    Yin, Jianxin
    Li, Baoguo
    Sun, Fujun
    Miao, Tianyu
    Cao, Yan
    Shi, Zhou
    Chen, Songchao
    Hu, Bifeng
    Ji, Wenjun
    SENSORS, 2023, 23 (13)
  • [40] Global Soil Salinity Prediction by Open Soil Vis-NIR Spectral Library
    Zhou, Yin
    Chen, Songchao
    Hu, Bifeng
    Ji, Wenjun
    Li, Shuo
    Hong, Yongsheng
    Xu, Hanyi
    Wang, Nan
    Xue, Jie
    Zhang, Xianglin
    Xiao, Yi
    Shi, Zhou
    REMOTE SENSING, 2022, 14 (21)