Monday, 7 November 2005
4

Global Soil Regions.

Paul Reich, USDA-NRCS, 324 Spry Island Road, Joppa, MD 21085, Hari Eswaran, USDA/NRCS Soil Survey Division, 1400 Independence Ave., SW, Washington, DC 20250, and Friedrich Beinroth, University of Puerto Rico, Dept. of Agronomy & Soils, Mayaguez, PR 00681-9030.

A 1:5 million scale global soil regions map is presented. The map identifies the dominant soil suborders and was originally published in the 2nd Edition of Soil Taxonomy, in 1999. It has subsequently been published in a number of textbooks and encyclopedias. The latest version includes changes that reflect updates to Soil Taxonomy. The introduction of the Gel- suborders required significant changes that resulted in a substantial increase in the area of these suborders, particularly Inceptisols. Other modifications were made based on new information from larger scale soil maps from select countries. Additional changes are anticipated and will be included in the global map to be presented at the World Congress of Soil Science in July 2006. With the introduction of the suborder of Gelepts, Inceptisols are the most extensive soils, followed by the Entisols. Estimates of the ice-free land area occupied by the orders are listed as follows by area in km2 and %. Gelisols 11,869,000 km2, 9.1%; Histosols 1,526,000 km2, 1.2%; Spodosols 4,596,000 km2, 3.5%; Andisols, 975,000 km2, 0.7%; Oxisols 9,811,000 km2, 7.5%; Vertisols 3,160,000 km2, 2.4%; Aridisols 15,629,000 km2, 11.9%; Ultisols 11,053,000 km2, 8.4%; Mollisols 9,161,000 km2, 7.0%; Alfisols 12,621,000 km2, 9.6%; Inceptisols 21,805,000 km2, 16.7%; Entisols 21,467,000 km2, 16.4%; Rocky land 1,801,000 km2, 1.4%; Shifting sands 5,322,000 km2, 4.1%.

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