Using low‑cost geophysical survey to map soil properties and delineate management zones on grazed permanent pastures
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Abstract
Usually, soils utilised for livestock production have similar high spatial variability as those
for agricultural or forest use. As a consequence, it is necessary to determine the spatial patterns
of the main soil properties as the first stage to implement site-specific management.
However, this has to be performed using an inexpensive technique because the profitability
in these types of farm are very low, so owners need a cheap, effective, and reliable method
to know which zones have similar production potential. Using soil apparent electrical conductivity
(ECa) measurements, obtained with a contact sensor at many locations, as the
basis to perform a directed soil sampling, 10 samples were taken at two depths (0–0.25 m
and 0.25–0.50 m) in a 2.3 ha field in Évora (southern Portugal). Firstly, relationships
between ECa and many soil properties were analysed using regression analysis. Six soil
properties (clay, silt, fine sand, soil moisture content, pH, and cation exchange capacity)
were significantly correlated with ECa. Consequently, spatial distributions of these variables
were visualised using map algebra techniques. Later, a fuzzy clustering algorithm
was utilised to delineate management zones, resulting in two subfields to be managed separately.
Finally, a principal component analysis was conducted to analyse the influence of
the soil properties and elevation on the soil variability. It was determined that elevation and
clay were the most important contributing properties. Therefore, these can be regarded as
key latent variables in this soil. Results showed that low-cost data based on ECa surveys
can be used to implement site-specific management in soils with permanent pastures, such
as those in the montado or dehesa ecosystems, in the southwest of the Iberian Peninsula.
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42. Moral, F., Serrano, J. (2019). "Using low-cost geophysical survey to map soil properties and delineate management zones on grazed permanent pastures", has been accepted for publication in Precision Agriculture (31/12/2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11119-018-09631-9