Spatial distribution and content of soil organic matter in an agricultural field in eastern Canada, as estimated from geostatistical tools

2010 ◽  
Vol 35 (3) ◽  
pp. 278-283 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lionel Mabit ◽  
Claude Bernard
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Holger Pagel ◽  
Björn Kriesche ◽  
Marie Uksa ◽  
Christian Poll ◽  
Ellen Kandeler ◽  
...  

<p>Trait-based models have improved the understanding and prediction of soil organic matter dynamics in terrestrial ecosystems. Microscopic observations and pore scale models are now increasingly used to quantify and elucidate the effects of soil heterogeneity on microbial processes. Combining both approaches provides a promising way to accurately capture spatial microbial-physicochemical interactions and to predict overall system behavior. The present study aims to quantify controls on carbon (C) turnover in soil due to the mm-scale spatial distribution of microbial decomposer communities in soil. A new spatially explicit trait-based model (SpatC) has been developed that captures the combined dynamics of microbes and soil organic matter (SOM) by taking into account microbial life-history traits and SOM accessibility. Samples of spatial distributions of microbes at µm-scale resolution were generated using a spatial statistical model based on Log Gaussian Cox Processes which was originally used to analyze distributions of bacterial cells in soil thin sections. These µm-scale distribution patterns were then aggregated to derive distributions of microorganisms at mm-scale. We performed Monte-Carlo simulations with microbial distributions that differ in mm-scale spatial heterogeneity and functional community composition (oligotrophs, copiotrophs and copiotrophic cheaters). Our modelling approach revealed that the spatial distribution of soil microorganisms triggers spatiotemporal patterns of C utilization and microbial succession. Only strong spatial clustering of decomposer communities induces a diffusion limitation of the substrate supply on the microhabitat scale, which significantly reduces the total decomposition of C compounds and the overall microbial growth. However, decomposer communities act as functionally redundant microbial guilds with only slight changes in C utilization. The combined statistical and process-based modelling approach derives distribution patterns of microorganisms at the mm-scale from microbial biogeography at microhabitat scale (µm) and quantifies the emergent macroscopic (cm) microbial and C dynamics. Thus, it effectively links observable process dynamics to the spatial control by microbial communities. Our study highlights a powerful approach that can provide further insights into the biological control of soil organic matter turnover.</p>


2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xumeng Zhang ◽  
Wuping Zhang ◽  
Mingjing Huang ◽  
Li Gao ◽  
Lei Qiao ◽  
...  

Abstract Dynamic changes in soil organic matter content affects the sustainable supply of soil water and fertilizer and impacts the stability of soil ecological function. Understanding the spatial distribution characteristics of soil organic matter will help deepen our understanding of the differences in soil organic matter content, soil formation law; such understanding would be useful for rational land use planning. Taking terrain data, meteorological data, and remote sensing data as auxiliary variables and the ordinary Kriging (OK) method as a control, this study compares the spatial prediction accuracies and mapping effects of various models (MLR, RK, GWR, GWRK, MGWR, and MGWRK) on soil organic matter. Our results show that the spatial distribution trend of soil organic matter predicted by each model is similar, but the prediction of composite models can reflect more mapping details than that of unitary models. The OK method can provide better support for spatial prediction when the sampling points are dense; however, the local models are superior in dealing with spatial non-stationarity. Notably, the MGWR model is superior to the GWR model, but the MGWRK model is inferior to the GWRK model. As a new method, the prediction accuracy of MGWRK reached 47.72% for the OK and RK methods and 40.08% for the GWRK method. The GWRK method achieved a better prediction accuracy. The influence mechanism of soil organic matter is complex, but the MGWR model more clearly reveals the complex nonlinear relationship between soil organic matter content and factors influencing it. This research can provide reference methods and mapping technical support to improve the spatial prediction accuracy of soil organic matter.


2020 ◽  
Vol 980 ◽  
pp. 437-448
Author(s):  
Hui Juan Zhang ◽  
Shou Chen Ma ◽  
Wen Kai Liu ◽  
He Bing Zhang ◽  
Song He Yuan

Underground mining has caused drastic disturbances to regional ecosystems and soil nutrients. Understanding the 3D spatial distribution of soil organic matter in coal arable land is crucial for agricultural production and environmental management. However, little research has been done on the three-dimensional modeling of soil organic matter. In this study, 3D kriging interpolation method and 3D stochastic simulation method were used to develop the 3D model of soil organic matter , and the root-mean-square error (RMSE) and mean error (ME) were used as evaluation indexes to compare the simulation accuracy of the two methods. Results showed that the spatial distribution of soil organic matter obtained by using 3D kriging interpolation method is relatively smooth, which reduce the difference of spatial data; while the spatial distribution of soil organic matter obtained by using 3D stochastic simulation method is relatively discrete and highlights the volatility of spatial distribution of raw data, the RMSE obtained by 3D kriging interpolation method and 3D stochastic simulation method respectively is 2.7711 g/kg and 1.8369 g/kg. The prediction accuracy of organic matter interpolation obtained by 3D stochastic simulation method is higher than that by 3D kriging interpolation method; so the 3D stochastic simulation method can reflect the spatial distribution characteristics of soil organic matter more realistically, and more suitable for 3D modeling of soil organic matter. According to the 3D modeling of soil organic matter, the content of soil organic matter has obvious spatial difference in different soil depth(0-20 cm、20-40 cm、40-60 cm) and decreases with the increase of soil depth; The result also showed that the content of soil organic matter decreased rapidly from the upper slope to the middle slope, and gradually increased from the middle slope to the bottom, so the soil organic matter content was obviously lost in the middle slope. This result may provide useful data for land reclamation and ecological reconstruction in coal mining subsidence area.


2014 ◽  
Vol 94 (3) ◽  
pp. 281-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Feng ◽  
M. Xu ◽  
M. Fan ◽  
S. S. Malhi ◽  
J. J. Schoenau ◽  
...  

Feng, W., Xu, M., Fan, M., Malhi, S. S., Schoenau, J. J., Six, J. and Plante, A. F. 2014. Testing for soil carbon saturation behavior in agricultural soils receiving long-term manure amendments. Can. J. Soil Sci. 94: 281–294. Agricultural soils are typically depleted in soil organic matter compared with their undisturbed counterparts, thus reducing their fertility. Organic amendments, particularly manures, provide the opportunity to restore soil organic matter stocks, improve soil fertility and potentially sequester atmospheric carbon (C). The application of the soil C saturation theory can help identify soils with large C storage potentials. The goal of this study was to test whether soil C saturation can be observed in various soil types in agricultural ecosystems receiving long-term manure amendments. Seven long-term agricultural field experiments from China and Canada were selected for this study. Manure amendments increased C concentrations in bulk soil, particulate organic matter+sand, and silt+clay fractions in all the experiments. The increase in C concentrations of silt+clay did not fit the asymptotic regression as a function of C inputs better than the linear regression, indicating that silt+clay did not exhibit C saturation behavior. However, 44% of calculated C loading values for silt+clay were greater than the presumed maximal C loading, suggesting that this maximum may be greater than 1 mg C m−2 for many soils. The influences of soil mineral surface properties on C concentrations of silt+clay fractions were site specific. Fine soil particles did not exhibit C saturation behavior likely because current C inputs were insufficient to fill the large C saturation deficits of intensely cultivated soils, suggesting these soils may continue to act as sinks for atmospheric C.


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (12) ◽  
pp. 415-432
Author(s):  
Hussam Hag Husein ◽  
Mohammad Mousa ◽  
Wahib Sahwan ◽  
Rupert Bäumler ◽  
Bernhard Lucke

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