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Spatial delineation of organic carbon-rich Colluvial soils in Chernozem regions by Terrain analysis and fuzzy classification

Publication at Faculty of Science |
2011

Abstract

Colluvial soils are considered to be the direct result of accelerated soil erosion, resulting in accumulation of humus-rich soil material in terrain depressions and base parts of slopes. The organic carbon concentration in these soils and their depth make them an important organic carbon storage.

Mapping the Colluvial soils, therefore, represents an important contribution in total carbon stock estimation. A method of delineating Colluvial soils is proposed by applying a combination of high resolution digital elevation model analysis and detailed field survey.

Two models based on fuzzy classification of soil units were created using different topographic derivatives as the only input parameters to predict the Colluvial soil area on a morphologically diverse study site in the Southern Moravia, Czech Republic. The model that considers only the derivatives with a strong relationship to Colluvial soil occurrence reached 71% accuracy in Colluvial area delineation, while the model combining six commonly used derivatives showed less favorable results.

The main advantage of the method lies in a low demand of input soil data and its relatively high accuracy.