Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia

Scientific information on the spatial variability and distribution of soil properties is critical for understanding ecosystem processes and designing sustainable soil–crop and environmental management decisions. However, little is known on spatial distribution and variability of soil properties at c...

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Autores principales: Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus, Tamene, Lulseged D., Vlek, Paul L.G.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43250
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author Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus
Tamene, Lulseged D.
Vlek, Paul L.G.
author_browse Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus
Tamene, Lulseged D.
Vlek, Paul L.G.
author_facet Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus
Tamene, Lulseged D.
Vlek, Paul L.G.
author_sort Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Scientific information on the spatial variability and distribution of soil properties is critical for understanding ecosystem processes and designing sustainable soil–crop and environmental management decisions. However, little is known on spatial distribution and variability of soil properties at catchment-scale in many tropical developing regions including Ethiopia. This study aims to examine catchment-scale spatial dependence and variability of soil properties using classical and geostatistical methods to indicate for site-specific soil management in the Mai-Negus catchment, northern Ethiopia. Soil samples were collected based on sampling zones identified by the knowledge of local farmers and field observation and analyzed following standard laboratory procedures for selected soil properties. The coefficient of variation of the soil properties ranged from 8.6% (pH) to 73.4% (clay) at catchment-scale. The mean soil organic carbon (OC) (1.21%), total nitrogen (TN) (0.12%), and available phosphorus (Pav) (7.8 mg kg?1) of the soils in the catchment were low, whereas high in exchangeable potassium (Ex K) (0.77 cmolc kg?1), and medium in cation exchange capacity (CEC) (23.4 cmolc kg?1) compared to the rate for African soils reported in literature. The results of semivariograms indicated a strong (8%) to moderate (63%) degree of spatial dependence for the soil properties. In addition, the goodness-of-prediction criterium (G) are higher than zero indicating that spatial soil properties mapped based on kriging interpolation are more accurate than the catchment average value (classical statistics) for site-specific management decisions. This study indicates a wide range of variability in the soil properties as the kriged maps of the soil properties at catchment-scale showed for sand (15–70%), silt (18–77%), clay (3–51%), bulk density (1.00–2.00 Mg m?3), OC (0.20–4.5%), TN (0.05–1.0%), Pav (1–26 mg kg?1), Ex K (0.10–1.30 cmolc kg?1), exchangeable calcium, Ex Ca (5–28 cmolc kg?1), exchangeable magnesium, Ex Mg (2–15 cmolc kg?1), CEC (8–51 cmolc kg?1), and iron (3–45 mg kg?1). The lowest soil nutrients and fine soil particles were measured on the sub-sampling zones such as low soil quality, eroded sites, and marginal land soils. Introducing appropriate interventions such as conservation tillage, fertilizer rates, agro-forestry practices, crop rotation, exclosure degraded lands, and conservation measures based on the kriged soil properties maps produced is crucial for sustainable production and environmental services.
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spelling CGSpace432502024-08-27T10:37:02Z Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus Tamene, Lulseged D. Vlek, Paul L.G. soil properties ethiophia propiedades del suelo etiopia Scientific information on the spatial variability and distribution of soil properties is critical for understanding ecosystem processes and designing sustainable soil–crop and environmental management decisions. However, little is known on spatial distribution and variability of soil properties at catchment-scale in many tropical developing regions including Ethiopia. This study aims to examine catchment-scale spatial dependence and variability of soil properties using classical and geostatistical methods to indicate for site-specific soil management in the Mai-Negus catchment, northern Ethiopia. Soil samples were collected based on sampling zones identified by the knowledge of local farmers and field observation and analyzed following standard laboratory procedures for selected soil properties. The coefficient of variation of the soil properties ranged from 8.6% (pH) to 73.4% (clay) at catchment-scale. The mean soil organic carbon (OC) (1.21%), total nitrogen (TN) (0.12%), and available phosphorus (Pav) (7.8 mg kg?1) of the soils in the catchment were low, whereas high in exchangeable potassium (Ex K) (0.77 cmolc kg?1), and medium in cation exchange capacity (CEC) (23.4 cmolc kg?1) compared to the rate for African soils reported in literature. The results of semivariograms indicated a strong (8%) to moderate (63%) degree of spatial dependence for the soil properties. In addition, the goodness-of-prediction criterium (G) are higher than zero indicating that spatial soil properties mapped based on kriging interpolation are more accurate than the catchment average value (classical statistics) for site-specific management decisions. This study indicates a wide range of variability in the soil properties as the kriged maps of the soil properties at catchment-scale showed for sand (15–70%), silt (18–77%), clay (3–51%), bulk density (1.00–2.00 Mg m?3), OC (0.20–4.5%), TN (0.05–1.0%), Pav (1–26 mg kg?1), Ex K (0.10–1.30 cmolc kg?1), exchangeable calcium, Ex Ca (5–28 cmolc kg?1), exchangeable magnesium, Ex Mg (2–15 cmolc kg?1), CEC (8–51 cmolc kg?1), and iron (3–45 mg kg?1). The lowest soil nutrients and fine soil particles were measured on the sub-sampling zones such as low soil quality, eroded sites, and marginal land soils. Introducing appropriate interventions such as conservation tillage, fertilizer rates, agro-forestry practices, crop rotation, exclosure degraded lands, and conservation measures based on the kriged soil properties maps produced is crucial for sustainable production and environmental services. 2011-12 2014-09-24T08:41:51Z 2014-09-24T08:41:51Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43250 en Limited Access Elsevier
spellingShingle soil properties
ethiophia
propiedades del suelo
etiopia
Brhane Tesfahunegn, Gebrayesus
Tamene, Lulseged D.
Vlek, Paul L.G.
Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title_full Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title_short Catchment-scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site-specific soil management in northern Ethiopia
title_sort catchment scale spatial variability of soil properties and implications on site specific soil management in northern ethiopia
topic soil properties
ethiophia
propiedades del suelo
etiopia
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/43250
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AT vlekpaullg catchmentscalespatialvariabilityofsoilpropertiesandimplicationsonsitespecificsoilmanagementinnorthernethiopia