Prediction of soil texture classes through different wavelength regions of reflectance spectroscopy at various soil depths

被引:71
|
作者
Coblinski, Joao Augusto [1 ]
Giasson, Elvio [1 ]
Dematte, Jose A. M. [2 ]
Dotto, Andre Carnieletto [2 ]
Ferreira Costa, Jose Janderson [1 ]
Vasat, Radim [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Rio Grande do Sul, Fac Agron, Dept Soil Sci, Bento Goncalves Ave 7712, BR-91540000 Porto Alegre, RS, Brazil
[2] Univ Sao Paulo, Dept Soil Sci, Coll Agr Luiz de Queiroz, Ave Padua Dias 11, BR-13418900 Piracicaba, SP, Brazil
[3] Czech Univ Life Sci Prague, Fac Agrobiol Food & Nat Resources, Dept Soil & Soil Protect, Kamycka 129, Prague 16500, Czech Republic
基金
巴西圣保罗研究基金会;
关键词
Soil texture; Soil spectroscopy; Vis-NIR; MIR; Reflectance; Cubist regression; ORGANIC-CARBON; SPECTRAL REFLECTANCE; NIR SPECTROSCOPY; TOTAL NITROGEN; CLAY; REGRESSION; MODEL; COMPONENTS; LIBRARIES; SAMPLES;
D O I
10.1016/j.catena.2020.104485
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The demand for quality and low-cost soil information is growing due to the demands of land use planning and precision agriculture. Soil texture is one of the key soil properties, as it determines other vital soil characteristics such as soil structure, water and thermal regime, diversity of living organisms, plant growth, as well as the soil quality in general. It is usually not constant over an area, varying in space and with soil depth. Routine soil texture analysis is, however, time consuming and expensive. Because of this, the success of proximal soil sensing techniques in estimate soil properties using the VIS-NIR-SWIR and MIR regions is increasing. Advantages of soil spectroscopy include time efficiency, economic convenience, non-destructive application and freeing of chemical agents involved. Therefore, the objectives of this study were: (a) to explore the potential of clay, sand and silt prediction using reflectance spectroscopy; (b) assess the performance of predictive models in different spectral regions, i.e. VIS-NIR-SWIR and MIR; (c) assess the effect of different soil depths on predictive models; and finally (d) explain the differences in prediction accuracy in the means of the input data structure. Soil samples were collected at three depths (0-20, 20-40 and 40-60 cm) at 70 sampling sites over a study area located in the State of Rio Grande do Sul (Brazil). The content of soil texture was determined by Pipette method, and soil spectra were obtained with FieldSpec Pro (VIS-NIR-SWIR) and by Alpha Sample Compartment RT (MIR). Cubist regression algorithm was applied to train predictive models in three separate modeling modes differing in spectral region: (i) VIS-NIR-SWIR, (ii) MIR and (iii) VIS-NIR-SWIR plus MIR. The results showed that the combination of all three soil depths led to a more accurate prediction of soil texture compared to subdivided soil depths. This was explained by variability of the data, which was larger for the total dataset than for the depth-specific data. Consequently, we suggested that no precise comparison between different studies can be made without a proper description of the input data. For all-depths models, the MIR calibration obtained the best accuracy, which was explained due to more information comprised in the MIR region against the VIS-NIR-SWIR. The bands that were more important in predicting soil texture in MIR are related to mineralogy, specifically to kaolinite. This study demonstrated that the MIR spectroscopy technique is capable to complement the standard soil particle size analysis, specially where a large number of soil samples need to be treated in a short period of time.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Prediction of Soil Erodibility by Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy in a Neotropical Dry Forest Biome
    Pontes, Samuel Ferreira
    Agra Bezerra da Silva, Yuri Jacques
    Martins, Vanessa
    Boechat, Cacio Luiz
    Ferreira Araujo, Ademir Sergio
    Dantas, Jussara Silva
    Costa Jr, Ozeas S.
    Barbosa, Ronny Sobreira
    LAND, 2022, 11 (12)
  • [32] Quantitative Prediction of Biochar Soil Amendments by Near-Infrared Reflectance Spectroscopy
    Allen, Ross M.
    Laird, David A.
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2013, 77 (05) : 1784 - 1794
  • [33] Prediction and Mapping of Soil Attributes using Diffuse Reflectance Spectroscopy and Magnetic Susceptibility
    Rabelo de Souza Bahia, Angelica Santos
    Marques Junior, Jose
    La Scala Junior, Newton
    Pellegrino Cerri, Carlos Eduardo
    Camargo, Livia Arantes
    SOIL SCIENCE SOCIETY OF AMERICA JOURNAL, 2017, 81 (06) : 1450 - 1462
  • [34] Simulation of hydrology following various volumes of irrigation to soil with different depths to the water table
    Huo, Z.
    Feng, S.
    Dai, X.
    Zheng, Y.
    Wang, Y.
    SOIL USE AND MANAGEMENT, 2012, 28 (02) : 229 - 239
  • [35] EFFECT OF BURNING ON GERMINATION OF SEEDS AT DIFFERENT SOIL DEPTHS OF VARIOUS TROPICAL TREE SPECIES
    BRINKMANN, WL
    VIEIRA, AN
    TURRIALBA, 1971, 21 (01): : 77 - +
  • [36] Assessment of different digital soil mapping methods for prediction of soil classes in the Shahrekord plain, Central Iran
    Esfandiarpour-Boroujeni, I
    Shahini-Shamsabadi, M.
    Shirani, H.
    Mosleh, Z.
    Bagheri-Bodaghabadi, M.
    Salehi, M. H.
    CATENA, 2020, 193
  • [37] Soil texture prediction using portable X-ray fluorescence spectrometry and visible near-infrared diffuse reflectance spectroscopy
    Benedet, Lucas
    Faria, Wilson Missina
    Godinho Silva, Sergio Henrique
    Mancini, Marcelo
    Melo Dematte, Jose Alexandre
    Guimaraes Guilherme, Luiz Roberto
    Curi, Nilton
    GEODERMA, 2020, 376
  • [38] Advanced machine learning model for better prediction accuracy of soil temperature at different depths
    Alizamir, Meysam
    Kisi, Ozgur
    Ahmed, Ali Najah
    Mert, Cihan
    Fai, Chow Ming
    Kim, Sungwon
    Kim, Nam Won
    El-Shafie, Ahmed
    PLOS ONE, 2020, 15 (04):
  • [39] Prediction of total nitrogen in cropland soil at different levels of soil moisture with Vis/NIR spectroscopy
    Liu, Yaolin
    Jiang, Qinghu
    Shi, Tiezhu
    Fei, Teng
    Wang, Junjie
    Liu, Guilin
    Chen, Yiyun
    ACTA AGRICULTURAE SCANDINAVICA SECTION B-SOIL AND PLANT SCIENCE, 2014, 64 (03): : 267 - 281
  • [40] Lignin and cellulose concentrations in roots of Douglas fir and European beech of different diameter classes and soil depths
    Thomas, Frank M.
    Molitor, Florian
    Werner, Willy
    TREES-STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION, 2014, 28 (01): : 309 - 315