136-3 Mapping Organic Carbon Stocks of Swiss Forest Soils.
See more from this Division: S05 PedologySee more from this Session: Symposium--Global Soil Mapping in a Changing World
Based on data from 1’033 plots we modeled SOC stocks of the organic layer and the mineral soil to depths of 30 cm and 100 cm for the Swiss forested area. We applied a novel robust restricted maximum likelihood method to fit a linear regression model with spatially correlated errors. For the regression analysis we used a broad range of covariates derived from climate data (e. g. precipitation, temperature), two elevation models (resolutions 25 and 2 m) with their terrain attributes and spectral reflectance data representing vegetation. Furthermore, the main cartographic categories of an overview soil map and a small-scale geological map were used to coarsely represent the parent material.
Results for topsoil SOC (0-30 cm without organic surface layer) showed residual autocorrelation that was weak but significant. Precipitation, spectral reflectance of the vegetation in near-infrared wavelength, a topographic position index and aggregated soil and geological map information were the only significant covariates. Testing the predictive power of the fitted model with independent test data resulted in satisfactory precision of the predictions (coefficient of determination 0.34). The fitted model was used to compute a robust kriging prediction map of the carbon stock in forest topsoils on a 1-ha grid over Switzerland. The mean predicted SOC stock to a depth of 30 cm amounts to 79.9 Mg/ha (coefficient of variation 0.34).
See more from this Session: Symposium--Global Soil Mapping in a Changing World